US West v. Utilities and Transp. Com'n

949 P.2d 1337
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1998
Docket64822-1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 949 P.2d 1337 (US West v. Utilities and Transp. Com'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
US West v. Utilities and Transp. Com'n, 949 P.2d 1337 (Wash. 1998).

Opinion

949 P.2d 1337 (1997)
134 Wash.2d 74

US WEST COMMUNICATIONS, INC., a Colorado corporation, Appellant,
v.
WASHINGTON UTILITIES AND TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION, Respondent.

No. 64822-1.

Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.

Argued June 24, 1997.
Decided December 24, 1997.
As Amended March 3, 1998.

*1340 Davis, Wright & Tremaine, Daniel Waggoner, Gregory Kopta, Ronald Roseman, Seattle, Richard Finnigan, Olympia, Dmitri Iglitzin, Seattle, Richard Potter, Timothy O'Connell, Everett, Edward Shaw, Miller, Nash & Wiener, Clyde Mac Iver, Brooks Harlow, Seattle, A. Timothy Williamson, Bellevue, Sara Miller, Portland, OR, Michael Shortly, Rochester, NY, Sherilyn Peterson, Bellevue, for Appellant.

Christine Gregoire, Atty. Gen., Gregory Trautman, Asst. Atty. Gen., Olympia, Christine Gregoire, Atty. Gen., Robert Manifold, Asst. Atty. Gen., Seattle, Roselyn Marcus, Carlisle, PA, Ater, Wynne, Hewitt, Dodson & Skerritt, Arthur Butler, Stephen Kennedy, for Respondent. *1338

*1339 GUY, Justice.

This case involves an appeal by a telecommunications company of a Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission decision denying the company's petition for an increase in telephone rates. We affirm the order of the Commission.

FACTS

On February 17, 1995, US West Communications, Inc. (US West or the Company) petitioned the Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission (Commission) for a statewide general rate increase for telephone services.[1] US West sought approximately *1341 $204 million a year in additional revenues, phased in over four years. The order indicates the Commission heard from 52 expert witnesses and received nearly 800 exhibits, comprising over 10,000 pages of written testimony and documentation. The record also includes more than 4,000 pages of transcript testimony occurring over several weeks. In addition to US West, Commission Staff, and Public Counsel,[2] many other parties[3] participated in the proceeding. The Commission held seven days of public hearings to receive testimony from customers in different cities throughout Washington.

During the rate proceedings, the Commission decided two motions which are challenged by US West in this appeal. The Commission denied US West's request to exclude consideration of revenue derived from the publication of yellow pages advertising. The Commission also held that the issues recently considered in a prior depreciation case need not be relitigated in the rate case.

In its 137-page final dispositive order, the Commission denied the request for increased rates and found, instead, that the Company was over-collecting approximately $91.5 million a year from Washington telephone customers. The Commission directed the Company to reduce rates by that amount.

The most relevant findings for the purposes of the issues presented to this Court (stated in abbreviated form) are as follows:

• US West's customer service has deteriorated significantly since 1991. There are significant problems with both repair and installation services. US West representatives have repeatedly promised service would improve but performance has worsened, measured by objective criteria.

• "Team Bonus Awards" and merit payments for US West employees are tied to standards putting a primary emphasis on the Company's financial performance to the point where complete failure to achieve customer service goals may be totally offset by superior Company financial performance. Such standards fail to tie bonus payments to customer service goals and permit emphasis on financial performance to the exclusion of customer service.

• Setting the Company's authorized rate of return on equity at the low end of the reasonable range, and allowing the Company to petition for adjustment upon a showing of improved stable customer service, will provide incentive to the Company to improve its customer service performance.

• US West voluntarily stipulated, as a condition of its predecessor's merger with two other companies into US West, that the merger would have no effect upon the imputation of yellow pages earnings. US West Direct, the publisher of the yellow pages, benefits substantially from its existing relationship with US West and from the former integrated operation as a part of Pacific Northwest Bell (PNB). Yellow pages classified advertising directory publication constitutes a former regulatory asset of the Company. Neither US West nor its predecessor, PNB, received compensation for transfer of the yellow pages publication to US West Direct, and US West receives no licensing fee for directory publication although it receives a small fee for basic *1342 subscriber information. US West Direct's relevant yellow pages advertising excess revenues during the test year were imputed by the Commission at $50,934,378 to US West's net operating income.

• Test year net operating income after all adjustment is $204,749,579.

• US West's adjusted Washington intrastate rate base is $1,561,793,482.

• A rate of return in the range of 9.367% to 9.88% on US West's rate base will maintain its credit and financial integrity and will enable it to acquire sufficient new capital at reasonable terms to meet its service requirements. Setting the authorized return at 9.367% with the opportunity to increase the rate of return to 9.627% upon satisfactory resolution of customer service quality problems will provide incentive to US West to improve its service quality. The appropriate overall rate of return for US West is therefore 9.367%.

• Costs of providing service are properly shown in a study of total service long run incremental costs. The Company's cost studies do not appropriately measure the Company's incremental costs of providing service. Costs of the local loop are not properly included in the incremental cost for local exchange service. The Hatfield Model cost study identifies the Company's true costs of providing local service more closely than the Company's study.

• The Company did not demonstrate that it faces effective competition sufficient to constrain prices in any market for its regulated services.

• Centrex service[4] tariffs that effect unbundling of the Centrex elements, price the highest-priced Centrex line at the level of the private line NAC, and remove the station location requirement, will achieve the unbundling goals identified in prior Commission orders and will be fair, just and reasonable.

Administrative Record (AR) at 1779-1915 (Fifteenth Supplemental Order: Commission Decision and Order Rejecting Tariff Revisions; Requiring Refiling—hereafter Order).

The Order denied US West's proposal to increase urban residential phone rates from the statewide average of $10.50 to $21.85 and rural residential rates to $26.35. The Commission found that the incremental cost of local service is less than $5.00 per month and that, even if the entire incremental cost of the "loop" (the facilities needed for the connection between the central office and the consumer's telephone which also carry long distance and specialized services, such as voice mail, as well as local service) is allocated to the local ratepayer, the price covers that cost. The Commission concluded there was no local service subsidy. The Commission directed the Company to establish a statewide residential rate of $10.50 per month, the average rate presently in effect.

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