Public Act 095-0009
 
SB0678 Enrolled LRB095 08411 DRH 28585 b

    AN ACT concerning telecommunications.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
ARTICLE 5.

 
    Section 5-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
Broadband Access on Passenger Rail Law.
 
    Section 5-5. Definitions. As used in this Article:
    "Department" means the Department of Transportation.
    "Passenger rail systems" includes all passenger rail
systems maintained by the National Passenger Railroad
Corporation in Illinois and those passenger rail systems under
the jurisdiction of the Commuter Rail Board as established in
Section 3B.08 of the Regional Transportation Authority Act.
 
    Section 5-10. Broadband Access on Passenger Rail Plan. The
Department shall deliver to the Governor and General Assembly a
plan for ensuring high speed data transmission services on all
passenger rail systems in Illinois at fair and reasonable
prices no later than December 31, 2007. The plan shall include
recommendations for acquiring necessary rights of way,
installation of necessary infrastructure, operation of high
speed data transmission services, and funding sources.
 
ARTICLE 10.

 
    Section 10-90. The Public Utilities Act is amended by
changing Sections 13-505.4, 13-701, and 13-1200 as follows:
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-505.4)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-505.4)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2007)
    Sec. 13-505.4. Provision of noncompetitive services.
    (a) A telecommunications carrier that offers or provides a
noncompetitive service, service element, feature, or
functionality on a separate, stand-alone basis to any customer
shall provide that service, service element, feature, or
functionality pursuant to tariff to all persons, including all
telecommunications carriers and competitors, in accordance
with the provisions of this Article.
    (b) A telecommunications carrier that offers or provides a
noncompetitive service, service element, feature, or
functionality to any customer as part of an offering of
competitive services pursuant to tariff or contract shall
publicly disclose the offering or provisioning of the
noncompetitive service, service element, feature, or
functionality by filing with the Commission information that
generally describes the offering or provisioning and that shows
the rates, terms, and conditions of the noncompetitive service,
service element, feature, or functionality. The information
shall be filed with the Commission concurrently with the filing
of the tariff or not more than 10 days following the customer's
acceptance of the offering in a contract.
    (c) A telecommunications carrier that is not subject to
regulation under an alternative regulation plan pursuant to
Section 13-506.1 of this Act may reduce the rate or charge for
a noncompetitive service, service element, feature, or
functionality offered to customers on a separate, stand-alone
basis or as part of a bundled service offering by filing with
the Commission a tariff that shows the reduced rate or charge
and all applicable terms and conditions of the noncompetitive
service, service element, feature, or functionality or bundled
offering. The reduction of rates or charges shall be permitted
upon the filing of the proposed rate, charge, classification,
tariff, or bundled offering. The total price of a bundled
offering shall not attribute any portion of the charge to
services subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission and
shall not be binding on the Commission in any proceeding under
Article IX of this Act to set the revenue requirement or to set
just and reasonable rates for services subject to the
jurisdiction of the Commission. Prices for bundles shall not be
subject to Section 13-505.1 of this Act. For purposes of this
subsection (c), a bundle is a group of services offered
together for a fixed price where at least one of the services
is an interLATA service as that term is defined in 47 U.S.C.
153(21), a cable service or a video service, a community
antenna television service, a satellite broadcast service, a
public mobile service as defined in Section 13-214 of this Act,
or an advanced telecommunications service as "advanced
telecommunications services" is defined in Section 13-517 of
this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-856.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-701)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-701)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2007)
    Sec. 13-701. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of
this Act to the contrary, the Commission has no power to
supervise or control any telephone cooperative as respects
assessment schedules or local service rates made or charged by
such a cooperative on a nondiscriminatory basis. In addition,
the Commission has no power to inquire into, or require the
submission of, the terms, conditions or agreements by or under
which telephone cooperatives are financed. A telephone
cooperative shall file with the Commission either a copy of the
annual financial report required by the Rural Electrification
Administration, or the annual financial report required of
other public utilities.
    Sections 13-712 and 13-713 of this Act do not apply to
telephone cooperatives.
(Source: P.A. 84-1063.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-1200)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2007)
    Sec. 13-1200. Repealer. This Article is repealed July 1,
2009 2007.
(Source: P.A. 94-76, eff. 6-24-05.)
 
ARTICLE 15.

 
    Section 15-5. The Public Utilities Act is amended by adding
the heading of Article XXI and Sections 21-100, 21-101,
21-101.1, 21-201, 21-301, 21-401, 21-601, 21-701, 21-801,
21-901, 21-1001, 21-1101, 21-1201, 21-1301, 21-1401, 21-1501,
and 21-1601 as follows:
 
    (220 ILCS 5/Art. XXI heading new)
ARTICLE XXI. CABLE AND VIDEO COMPETITION

 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-100 new)
    Sec. 21-100. Short title. This Article may be cited as the
Cable and Video Competition Law of 2007.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-101 new)
    Sec. 21-101. Findings. With respect to cable and video
competition, the General Assembly finds that:
    (a) The economy in the State of Illinois will be enhanced
by investment in new communications, cable services and video
services infrastructure, including broadband facilities, fiber
optic, and Internet protocol technologies.
    (b) Cable services and video services bring important daily
benefits to Illinois consumers by providing news, education,
and entertainment.
    (c) Competitive cable service and video service providers
are capable of providing new video programming services and
competition to Illinois consumers and of decreasing the prices
for video programming services paid by Illinois consumers.
    (d) Although there has been some competitive entry into the
facilities-based video programming market since current
franchising requirements in this State were enacted, further
entry by facilities-based providers could benefit consumers,
provided cable and video services are equitably available to
all Illinois consumers at reasonable prices.
    (e) The provision of competitive cable services and video
services is a matter of statewide concern that extends beyond
the boundaries of individual local units of government.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, public rights-of-way are
limited resources over which the municipality has a custodial
duty to ensure that they are used, repaired and maintained in a
manner that best serves the public interest.
    (f) The State authorization process and uniform standards
and procedures in this Article are intended to enable rapid and
widespread entry by competitive providers which will bring to
Illinois consumers the benefits of video competition including
providing consumers with more choice, lower prices, higher
speed and more advanced Internet access, more diverse and
varied news, public information, education, and entertainment
programming, and will bring to this State and its local units
of government the benefits of new infrastructure investment,
job growth, and innovation in broadband and Internet protocol
technologies and deployment.
    (g) Providing an incumbent cable or video service provider
with the option to secure a State-issued authorization through
the termination of existing cable franchises between incumbent
cable and video service providers and any local franchising
authority, is part of the new regulatory framework established
by this Article. This Article is intended to best ensure equal
treatment and parity among providers and technologies.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-101.1 new)
    Sec. 21-101.1. Applicability. The provisions of this
amendatory Act of the 95th Illinois General Assembly shall
apply only to a holder of a cable service or video service
authorization issued by the Commission pursuant to this Article
XXI of the Public Utilities Act, and shall not apply to any
person or entity that provides cable television services under
a cable television franchise issued by any municipality or
county pursuant to Section 11-42-11 of the Illinois Municipal
Code (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11) or Section 5-1095 of the Counties
Code (55 ILCS 5/5-1095), unless specifically provided for
herein. A local unit of government that has an existing
agreement for the provision of video services with a company or
entity that uses its telecommunications facilities to provide
video service as of May 30, 2007 may continue to operate under
that agreement or may, at its discretion, terminate the
existing agreement and require the video provider to obtain a
State-issued authorization under this Article.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-201 new)
    Sec. 21-201. Definitions. As used in this Article:
    (a) "Access" means that the cable or video provider is
capable of providing cable services or video services at the
household address using any technology, other than
direct-to-home satellite service, which provides two-way
broadband Internet capability and video programming, content,
and functionality, regardless of whether any customer has
ordered service or whether the owner or landlord or other
responsible person has granted access to the household. If more
than one technology is used, the technologies shall provide
similar two-way broadband Internet accessibility and similar
video programming.
    (b) "Basic cable or video service" means any cable or video
service offering or tier which includes the retransmission of
local television broadcast signals.
    (c) "Broadband service" means a high speed service
connection to the public Internet capable of supporting, in at
least one direction, a speed in excess of 200 kilobits per
second (kbps) to the network demarcation point at the
subscriber's premises.
    (d) "Cable operator" means that term as defined in 47
U.S.C. 522(5).
    (e) "Cable service" means that term as defined in 47 U.S.C.
522(6).
    (f) "Cable system" means that term as defined in 47 U.S.C.
522(7).
    (g) "Commission" means the Illinois Commerce Commission.
    (h) "Competitive cable service or video service provider"
means a person or entity that is providing or seeks to provide
cable service or video service in an area where there is at
least one incumbent cable operator.
    (i)"Designated Market Area" means a designated market
area, as determined by Nielsen Media Research and published in
the 1999-2000 Nielsen Station Index Directory and Nielsen
Station Index United States Television Household Estimates or
any successor publication. For any designated market area that
crosses State lines, only households in the portion of the
designated market area that is located within the holder's
telecommunications service area in the State where access to
video service will be offered shall be considered.
    (j) "Footprint" means the geographic area designated by the
cable service or video service provider as the geographic area
in which it will offer cable services or video services during
the period of its State-issued authorization. Each footprint
shall be identified in terms of either (i) exchanges, as that
term is defined in Section 13-206 of the Public Utilities Act;
(ii) a collection of United States Census Bureau Block numbers
(13 digit); (iii) if the area is smaller than the areas
identified in either (i) or (ii), by geographic information
system digital boundaries meeting or exceeding national map
accuracy standards; or (iv) local units of government.
    (k) "Holder" means a person or entity that has received
authorization to offer or provide cable or video service from
the Commission pursuant to Section 21-401 of this Article.
    (l) "Household" means a house, an apartment, a mobile home,
a group of rooms, or a single room that is intended for
occupancy as separate living quarters. Separate living
quarters are those in which the occupants live and eat
separately from any other persons in the building and which
have direct access from the outside of the building or through
a common hall. This definition is consistent with the United
States Census Bureau, as that definition may be amended
thereafter.
    (m) "Incumbent cable operator" means a person or entity
that provided cable services or video services in a particular
area under a franchise agreement with a local unit of
government pursuant to Section 11-42-11 of the Illinois
Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11) or Section 5-1095 of the
Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/5-1095) on January 1, 2007.
    (n) "Local franchising authority" means the local unit of
government that has or requires a franchise with a cable
operator, a provider of cable services or a provider of video
services to construct or operate a cable or video system or to
offer cable services or video services under Section 11-42-11
of the Illinois Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11) or Section
5-1095 of the Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/5-1095).
    (o) "Local unit of government" means a city, village,
incorporated town, or a county.
    (p) "Low-income household" means those residential
households located within the holder's existing telephone
service area where the average annual household income is less
than $35,000 based on the United States Census Bureau estimates
adjusted annually to reflect rates of change and distribution.
    (q) "Public rights-of-way" means the areas on, below, or
above a public roadway, highway, street, public sidewalk,
alley, waterway, or utility easements dedicated for compatible
uses.
    (r) "Service" means the provision of "cable service" or
"video service" to subscribers and the interaction of
subscribers with the person or entity that has received
authorization to offer or provide cable or video service from
the Commission pursuant to Section 21-401 of this Article.
    (s) "Service provider fee" means the amount paid under
Section 21-801 of this Article by the holder to a municipality,
or in the case of an unincorporated service area to a county,
for service areas within its territorial jurisdiction, but
under no circumstances shall the service provider fee be paid
to more than one local unit of government for the same portion
of the holder's service area.
    (t) "Telecommunications service area" means the area
designated by the Commission as the area in which a
telecommunications company was obligated to provide
non-competitive local telephone service as of February 8, 1996
as incorporated into Section 13-202.5 of Article XIII of the
Public Utilities Act.
    (u) "Video programming" means that term as defined in 47
U.S.C. 522(20).
    (v) "Video service" means video programming and subscriber
interaction, if any, that is required for the selection or use
of such video programming services, and which is provided
through wireline facilities located at least in part in the
public rights-of-way without regard to delivery technology,
including Internet protocol technology. This definition does
not include any video programming provided by a commercial
mobile service provider defined in 47 U.S.C. 332(d) or any
video programming provided solely as part of, and via, service
that enables users to access content, information, electronic
mail, or other services offered over the public Internet.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-301 new)
    Sec. 21-301. Eligibility.
    (a) A person or entity seeking to provide cable service or
video service in this State after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly shall either (1)
obtain a State-issued authorization pursuant to Section 401 of
the Cable and Video Competition Act (220 ILCS 5/21-401); (2)
obtain authorization pursuant to Section 11-42-11 of the
Illinois Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11); or (3) obtain
authorization pursuant to Section 5-1095 of the Counties Code
(55 ILCS 5/5-1095).
    (b) An incumbent cable operator shall be eligible to apply
for a State-issued authorization as provided in subsection (c).
Upon expiration of its current franchise agreement, an
incumbent cable operator may obtain State authorization from
the Commission pursuant to this Article or may pursue a
franchise renewal with the appropriate local franchise
authority under State and federal law. An incumbent cable
operator and any successor-in-interest that receives a
State-issued authorization shall be obligated to provide
access to cable services or video services within any local
unit of government at the same levels required by the local
franchising authorities for the local unit of government on the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General
Assembly.
    (c)(1) An incumbent cable operator may elect to terminate
its agreement with the local franchising authority and obtain a
State-issued authorization by providing written notice to the
Commission and the affected local franchising authority and any
entity authorized by that franchising authority to manage
public, education, and government access at least 180 days
prior to its filing an application for a State-issued
authorization. The existing agreement shall be terminated on
the date that the Commission issues the State-issued
authorization.
    (2) An incumbent cable operator that elects to terminate an
existing agreement with a local franchising authority under
this Section is responsible for remitting to the affected local
franchising authority and any entity designated by that local
franchising authority to manage public, education, and
government access before the 46th day after the date the
agreement is terminated any accrued but unpaid fees due under
the terminated agreement. If that incumbent cable operator has
credit remaining from prepaid franchise fees, such amount of
the remaining credit may be deducted from any future fees the
incumbent cable operator must pay to the local franchising
authority pursuant to Section 21-801(b) of this Article.
    (3) An incumbent cable operator that elects to terminate an
existing agreement with a local franchising authority under
this Section shall pay the affected local franchising authority
and any entity designated by that franchising authority to
manage public, education, and government access, at the time
that they would have been due, all monetary payments for
public, education, or government access that would have been
due during the remaining term of the agreement had it not been
terminated as provided in this paragraph. All payments made by
an incumbent cable operator pursuant to the previous sentence
of this paragraph may be credited against the fees that that
operator owes under Section 21-801(d)(1) of this Article.
    (d) For purposes of this Article, the Commission shall be
the franchising authority for cable service or video service
providers that apply for and obtain a State-issued
authorization under this Article with regard to the footprint
covered by such authorization. Notwithstanding any other
provision of this Article, holders using telecommunications
facilities to provide cable service or video service are not
obligated to provide that service outside the holder's
telecommunications service area.
    (e) Any person or entity that applies for and obtains a
State-issued authorization under this Article shall not be
subject to Section 11-42-11 of the Illinois Municipal Code (65
ILCS 5/11-42-11) or Section 5-1095 of the Counties Code (55
ILCS 5/5-1095), except as provided in this Article. Except as
provided under this Article, neither the Commission nor any
local unit of government may require a person or entity that
has applied for and obtained a State-issued authorization to
obtain a separate franchise or pay any franchise fee on cable
service or video service.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-401 new)
    Sec. 21-401. Applications.
    (a) (1) A person or entity seeking to provide cable service
or video service pursuant to this Article shall not use the
public rights-of-way for the installation or construction of
facilities for the provision of cable service or video service
or offer cable service or video service until it has obtained a
State-issued authorization to offer or provide cable or video
service under Section 401 of this Article, except as provided
for in subsection (a)(2). All cable or video providers offering
or providing service in this State shall have authorization
pursuant to either (i) the Cable and Video Competition Law of
2007 (220 ILCS 5/21-100 et seq.); (ii) Section 11-42-11 of the
Illinois Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11); or (iii) Section
5-1095 of the Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/5-1095).
    (2) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a local unit of
government from granting a permit to a person or entity for the
use of the public rights-of-way to install or construct
facilities to provide cable service or video service, at its
sole discretion. No unit of local government shall be liable
for denial or delay of a permit prior to the issuance of a
State-issued authorization.
    (b) The application to the Commission for State-issued
authorization shall contain a completed affidavit submitted by
the applicant and signed by an officer or general partner of
the applicant affirming all of the following:
        (1) That the applicant has filed or will timely file
    with the Federal Communications Commission all forms
    required by that agency in advance of offering cable
    service or video service in this State;
        (2) That the applicant agrees to comply with all
    applicable federal and State statutes and regulations;
        (3) That the applicant agrees to comply with all
    applicable local unit of government regulations;
        (4) An exact description of the cable service or video
    service area where the cable service or video service will
    be offered during the term of the State-issued
    authorization. The service area shall be identified in
    terms of either (i) exchanges, as that term is defined in
    Section 13-206 of the Public Utilities Act; (ii) a
    collection of United States Census Bureau Block numbers (13
    digit); (iii) if the area is smaller than the areas
    identified in either (i) or (ii), by geographic information
    system digital boundaries meeting or exceeding national
    map accuracy standards; or (iv) local unit of government.
    The description shall include the number of low-income
    households within the service area or footprint. If an
    applicant is a an incumbent cable operator, the incumbent
    cable operator and any successor-in-interest shall be
    obligated to provide access to cable services or video
    services within any local units of government at the same
    levels required by the local franchising authorities for
    the local unit of government on the effective date of this
    amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly and its
    application shall provide a description of an area no
    smaller than the service areas contained in its
    franchise(s) within the jurisdiction of the local unit of
    government in which it seeks to offer cable or video
    service;
        (5) The location and telephone number of the
    applicant's principal place of business within this State
    and the names of the applicant's principal executive
    officers who are responsible for communications concerning
    the application and the services to be offered pursuant to
    the application, the applicant's legal name and any name or
    names under which the applicant does or will provide cable
    services or video services in this State;
        (6) A certification that the applicant has
    concurrently delivered a copy of the application to all
    local units of government that include all or any part of
    the service area identified in subsection (b)(4) within
    such local unit of government's jurisdictional boundaries;
        (7) The expected date that cable service or video
    service will be initially offered in the area identified in
    subsection (b)(4). In the event that a holder does not
    offer cable services or video services within three months
    after the expected date, it shall amend its application and
    update the expected date service will be offered and
    explain the delay in offering cable services or video
    services;
        (8) The application shall include adequate assurance
    that the applicant possesses the financial, managerial,
    legal, and technical qualifications necessary to construct
    and operate the proposed system, and to promptly repair any
    damage to the public right-of-way caused by the applicant,
    and to pay the cost of removal of its facilities. To
    accomplish these requirements, the applicant may, at the
    time the applicant seeks to use the public rights-of-way in
    that jurisdiction, be required by the State of Illinois
    and/or later be required by the local unit of government to
    post a bond, produce a certificate of insurance, or
    otherwise demonstrate its financial responsibility; and
        (9) The application shall include the applicant's
    general standards related to customer service required by
    220 ILCS 5/70-501, which shall include, but not be limited
    to, installation, disconnection, service and repair
    obligations; appointment hours, employee ID requirements;
    customer service telephone numbers and hours; procedures
    for billing, charges, deposits, refunds, and credits;
    procedures for termination of service; notice of deletion
    of programming service, changes related to transmission of
    programming or changes or increases in rates; use and
    availability of parental control or lock-out devices;
    complaint procedures and procedures for bill dispute
    resolution, and a description of the rights and remedies
    available to consumers if the holder does not materially
    meet their customer service standards; and special
    services for customers with visual, hearing or mobility
    disabilities.
    (c)(1) The applicant may designate information that it
submits in its application or subsequent reports as
confidential or proprietary, provided that the applicant
states the reasons the confidential designation is necessary.
The Commission shall provide adequate protection for such
information pursuant to Section 5/4-404 of the Public Utilities
Act. If the Commission, a local unit of government, or any
other party seeks public disclosure of information designated
as confidential, the Commission shall consider the
confidential designation in a proceeding under the
Administrative Procedures Act, and the burden of proof to
demonstrate that the designated information is confidential
shall be upon the applicant. Designated information shall
remain confidential pending the Commission's determination of
whether the information is entitled to confidential treatment.
Information designated as confidential shall be provided to
local units of government for purposes of assessing compliance
with this Article as permitted under a Protective Order issued
by the Commission pursuant to the Commission's rules and to the
Attorney General pursuant to Section 6.5 of the Attorney
General Act, 15 ILCS 205/6.5. Information designated as
confidential under this Section or determined to be
confidential upon Commission review shall only be disclosed
pursuant to a valid and enforceable subpoena or court order or
as required by the Freedom of Information Act. Nothing herein
shall delay the application approval timeframes set forth in
this Article.
    (2) Information regarding the location of video services
that have been or are being offered to the public and aggregate
information included in the reports required by this Article
shall not be designated or treated as confidential.
    (d)(1) The Commission shall post all applications it
receives under this Article on its web site within five (5)
business days.
    (2) The Commission shall notify an applicant for a cable
service or video service authorization whether the applicant's
application and affidavit are complete on or before the 15th
business day after the applicant submits the application. If
the application and affidavit are not complete, the Commission
shall state in its notice all of the reasons the application or
affidavit are incomplete, and the applicant shall resubmit a
complete application. The Commission shall have 30 days after
submission by the applicant of a complete application and
affidavit to issue the service authorization. If the Commission
does not notify the applicant regarding the completeness of the
application and affidavit or issue the service authorization
within the time periods required under this subsection, the
application and affidavit shall be considered complete and the
service authorization issued upon the expiration of the 30th
day.
    (e) The authorization issued by the Commission will expire
on the date listed in Section 21-1601 and shall contain or
include all of the following:
        (1) A grant of authority to provide cable service or
    video service in the service area footprint as requested in
    the application, subject to the laws of the State and the
    ordinances, rules and regulations of the local units of
    government.
        (2) A grant of authority to use, occupy, and construct
    facilities in the public rights-of-way for the delivery of
    cable service or video service in the service area
    footprint, subject to the laws, ordinances, rules or
    regulations of this State and local units of governments.
        (3) A statement that the grant of authority is subject
    to lawful operation of the cable service or video service
    by the applicant, its affiliated entities or its
    successors-in-interest.
        (4) The Commission shall notify a local unit of
    government within three (3) business days of the grant of
    any authorization within a service area footprint if that
    authorization includes any part of the local unit of
    government's jurisdictional boundaries.
    (f) The authorization issued pursuant to Section 401 of
this Article by the Commission may be transferred to any
successor-in-interest to the applicant to which it is initially
granted without further Commission action if the
successor-in-interest (i) submits an application and the
information required by Section 21-401(b) for the
successor-in-interest and (ii) is not in violation of this
Article or of any federal, State, or local law, ordinance, rule
or regulation. A successor-in-interest shall file its
application and notice of transfer with the Commission and the
relevant local units of government no less than fifteen (15)
business days prior to the completion of the transfer. The
Commission is not required or authorized to act upon the notice
of transfer; however, the transfer is not effective until the
Commission approves the successor-in-interest's application. A
local unit of government or the Attorney General may seek to
bar a transfer of ownership by filing suit in a court of
competent jurisdiction predicated on the existence of a
material and continuing breach of this Article by the holder, a
pattern of noncompliance with customer service standards by the
potential successor-in-interest, or the insolvency of the
potential successor-in-interest. If a transfer is made when
there are violations of this Article or of any federal, State,
or local law, ordinance, rule or regulation, the
successor-in-interest shall be subject to three times the
penalties provided for in this Article.
    (g) The authorization issued pursuant to Section 21-401 of
this Article by the Commission may be terminated, or its cable
service or video service area footprint may be modified, by the
cable service provider or video service provider by submitting
notice to the Commission and to the relevant local unit of
government containing a description of the change on the same
terms as the initial description pursuant to Section
21-401(b)(4). The Commission is not required or authorized to
act upon that notice. It shall be a violation of this Article
for a holder to discriminate against potential residential
subscribers because of the race or income of the residents in
the local area in which the group resides by terminating or
modifying its cable service or video service area footprint. It
shall be a violation of this Article for a holder to terminate
or modify its cable service or video service area footprint if
it leaves an area with no cable service or video service from
any provider.
    (h) The Commission's authority to administer this Article
is limited to the powers and duties explicitly provided under
this Article. Its authority under this Article does not include
or limit the powers and duties that the Commission has under
the other Articles of the Public Utilities Act, the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act (5 ILCS 100/) or any other law or
regulation to conduct proceedings other than as provided in
subsection (c) above, or to promulgate rules or regulations.
The Commission shall not have the authority to limit or expand
the obligations and requirements provided in this Section, or
to regulate or control a person or entity to the extent that
person or entity is providing cable service or video service
except as provided in this Article.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-601 new)
    Sec. 21-601. Public, education, and government access. For
the purposes of this Section, "programming" means content
produced or provided by any person, group, governmental agency,
or noncommercial public or private agency or organization.
    (a) Not later than 90 days after a request by the local
unit of government or its designee that has received notice
under Section 21-801(a) of this Article, the holder shall (i)
designate the same amount of capacity on its network to provide
for public, education, and government access use, as the
incumbent cable operator is required to designate under its
franchise terms in effect with a local unit of government on
January 1, 2007; and (ii) retransmit to its subscribers the
same number of public, education, and government access
channels as the incumbent cable operator was retransmitting to
subscribers on January 1, 2007.
    (b) If the local unit of government produces or maintains
the public education or government programming in a manner or
form that is compatible with the holder's network, it shall
transmit such programming to the holder in that form provided
that form will permit the holder to satisfy the requirements of
Section 21-601(c). If the local unit of government does not
produce or maintain such programming in that manner or form,
then the holder shall be responsible for any changes in the
form of the transmission necessary to make public, education,
and government programming compatible with the technology or
protocol used by the holder to deliver services. The holder
shall receive programming from the local unit of government (or
the local unit of government's public, education, and
government programming providers) and transmit that public,
education, and government programming directly to the holder's
subscribers within the local unit of government's jurisdiction
at no cost to the local unit of government or the public,
education, and government programming providers. If the holder
is required to change the form of the transmission, the local
unit of government or its designee shall provide reasonable
access to the holder to allow the holder to transmit the
public, education, and government programming in an economical
manner subject to the requirements of Section 21-601(c).
    (c) The holder shall provide to subscribers public,
education and government access channel capacity at equivalent
visual and audio quality and equivalent functionality, from the
viewing perspective of the subscriber, to that of commercial
channels carried on the holder's basic cable or video service
offerings or tiers without the need for any equipment other
than the equipment necessary to receive the holder's basic
cable or video service offerings or tiers.
    (d) The holder and an incumbent cable operator shall
negotiate in good faith to interconnect their networks, if
needed, for the purpose of providing public, education, and
government programming. Interconnection may be accomplished by
direct cable, microwave link, satellite, or other reasonable
method of connection. The holder and the incumbent cable
operator shall provide interconnection of the public,
education, and government channels on reasonable terms and
conditions and may not withhold the interconnection. If a
holder and an incumbent cable operator cannot reach a mutually
acceptable interconnection agreement, the local unit of
government may require the incumbent cable operator to allow
the holder to interconnect its network with the incumbent cable
operator's network at a technically feasible point on their
networks. If no technically feasible point for interconnection
is available, the holder and an incumbent cable operator shall
each make an interconnection available to the public,
education, and government channel originators at their local
origination points and shall provide the facilities necessary
for the interconnection. The cost of any interconnection shall
be borne by the holder unless otherwise agreed to by the
parties. The interconnection required by this subsection shall
be completed within the 90-day deadline set forth in subsection
(a).
    (e) The public, education, and government channels shall be
for the exclusive use of the local unit of government or its
designee to provide public, education, and government
programming. The public, education, and government channels
shall be used only for noncommercial purposes. However,
advertising, underwriting, or sponsorship recognition may be
carried on the channels for the purpose of funding public,
education, and government access related activities.
    (f) Public, education and government channels shall all be
carried on the holder's basic cable or video service offerings
or tiers. To the extent feasible, the public, education and
government channels shall not be separated numerically from
other channels carried on the holder's basic cable or video
service offerings or tiers, and the channel numbers for the
public, education and government channels shall be the same
channel numbers used by the incumbent cable operator unless
prohibited by federal law. After the initial designation of
public, education and government channel numbers, the channel
numbers shall not be changed without the agreement of the local
unit of government or the entity to which the local unit of
government has assigned responsibility for managing public,
education and government access channels unless the change is
required by federal law. Each channel shall be capable of
carrying a National Television System Committee (NTSC)
television signal.
    (g) The holder shall provide a listing of public, education
and government channels on channel cards and menus provided to
subscribers in a manner equivalent to other channels if the
holder uses such cards and menus. Further, the holder shall
provide a listing of public, education, and government
programming on its electronic program guide if such a guide is
utilized by the holder. It is the public, education and
government entity's responsibility to provide the holder or its
designated agent, as determined by the holder, with program
schedules and information in a timely manner.
    (h) If less than three public, education, and government
channels are provided within the local unit of government as of
January 1, 2007, a local unit of government whose jurisdiction
lies within the authorized service area of the holder may
initially request the holder to designate sufficient capacity
for up to three public, education, and government channels. A
local unit of government or its designee that seeks to add
additional capacity shall give the holder a written
notification specifying the number of additional channels to be
used, specifying the number of channels in actual use, and
verifying that the additional channels requested will be put
into actual use.
    (i) The holder shall, within 90 days of a request by the
local unit of government or its designated public, education,
or government access entity, provide sufficient capacity for an
additional channel for public, education, and government
access when the programming on a given access channel exceeds
40 hours per week as measured on a quarterly basis. The
additional channel shall not be used for any purpose other than
for carrying additional public, education, or government
access programming.
    (j) The public, education, and government access
programmer is solely responsible for the content that it
provides over designated public, education, or government
channels. A holder shall not exercise any editorial control
over any programming on any channel designed for public,
education, or government use or on any other channel required
by law or a binding agreement with the local unit of
government.
    (k) A holder shall not be subject to any civil or criminal
liability for any program carried on any channel designated for
public, education, or government use.
    (l) A court of competent jurisdiction shall have exclusive
jurisdiction to enforce any requirement under this Section or
resolve any dispute regarding the requirements set forth in
this Section, and no provider of cable service or video service
may be barred from providing service or be required to
terminate service as a result of that dispute or enforcement
action.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-701 new)
    Sec. 21-701. Emergency alert system. The holder shall
comply with all applicable requirements of the Federal
Communications Commission involving the distribution and
notification of federal, State, and local emergency messages
over the emergency alert system applicable to cable operators.
The holder will provide a requesting local unit of government
with sufficient information regarding how to submit, via
telephone or web listing, a local emergency alert for
distribution over its cable or video network. To the extent
that a local unit of government requires incumbent cable
operators to provide emergency alert system messages or
services in excess of the requirements of this Section, the
holder shall comply with any such additional requirements
within the jurisdiction of the local franchising authority. The
holder may provide a local emergency alert to an area larger
than the boundaries of the local unit of government issuing the
emergency alert.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-801 new)
    Sec. 21-801. Applicable fees payable to the local unit of
government.
    (a) Prior to offering cable service or video service in a
local unit of government's jurisdiction, a holder shall notify
the local unit of government. The notice shall be given to the
local unit of government at least 10 days before the holder
begins to offer cable service or video service within the
boundaries of that local unit of government.
    (b) In any local unit of government in which a holder
offers cable service or video service on a commercial basis,
the holder shall be liable for and pay the service provider fee
to the local unit of government. The local unit of government
shall adopt an ordinance imposing such a fee. The holder's
liability for the fee shall commence on the first day of the
calendar month that is at least 30 days after the holder
receives such ordinance. The ordinance shall be sent by mail,
postage prepaid, to the address listed on the holder's
application provided to the local unit of government pursuant
to Section 21-401(b)(6). The fee authorized by this Section
shall be 5% of gross revenues or the same as the fee paid to the
local unit of government by any incumbent cable operator
providing cable service. The payment of the service provider
fee shall be due on a quarterly basis, 45 days after the close
of the calendar quarter. If mailed, the fee is considered paid
on the date it is postmarked. Except as provided in this
Article, the local unit of government may not demand any
additional fees or charges from the holder and may not demand
the use of any other calculation method other than allowed
under this Article.
    (c) For purposes of this Article, "gross revenues" means
all consideration of any kind or nature, including, without
limitation, cash, credits, property, and in-kind contributions
received by the holder for the operation of a cable or video
system to provide cable service or video service within the
holder's cable service or video service area within the local
unit of government's jurisdiction.
        (1) Gross revenues shall include the following:
            (i) Recurring charges for cable service or video
        service.
            (ii) Event-based charges for cable service or
        video service, including, but not limited to,
        pay-per-view and video-on-demand charges.
            (iii) Rental of set top boxes and other cable
        service or video service equipment.
            (iv) Service charges related to the provision of
        cable service or video service, including but not
        limited to activation, installation, and repair
        charges.
            (v) Administrative charges related to the
        provision of cable service or video service, including
        but not limited to service order and service
        termination charges.
            (vi) Late payment fees or charges, insufficient
        funds check charges, and other charges assessed to
        recover the costs of collecting delinquent payments.
            (vii) A pro rata portion of all revenue derived by
        the holder or its affiliates pursuant to compensation
        arrangements for advertising or for promotion or
        exhibition of any products or services derived from the
        operation of the holder's network to provide cable
        service or video service within the local unit of
        government's jurisdiction. The allocation shall be
        based on the number of subscribers in the local unit of
        government divided by the total number of subscribers
        in relation to the relevant regional or national
        compensation arrangement.
            (viii) Compensation received by the holder that is
        derived from the operation of the holder's network to
        provide cable service or video service with respect to
        commissions that are received by the holder as
        compensation for promotion or exhibition of any
        products or services on the holder's network, such as a
        "home shopping" or similar channel, subject to
        subsection (b)(ix).
            (ix) In the case of a cable service or video
        service that is bundled or integrated functionally
        with other services, capabilities, or applications,
        the portion of the holder's revenue attributable to the
        other services, capabilities, or applications shall be
        included in gross revenue unless the holder can
        reasonably identify the division or exclusion of the
        revenue from its books and records that are kept in the
        regular course of business.
            (x) The service provider fee permitted by Section
        21-801(b) of this Article.
        (2) Gross revenues do not include any of the following:
            (i) Revenues not actually received, even if
        billed, such as bad debt, subject to Section
        21-801(c)(1)(vi).
            (ii) Refunds, discounts, or other price
        adjustments that reduce the amount of gross revenues
        received by the holder of the State-issued
        authorization to the extent the refund, rebate,
        credit, or discount is attributable to cable service or
        video service.
            (iii) Regardless of whether the services are
        bundled, packaged, or functionally integrated with
        cable service or video service, any revenues received
        from services not classified as cable service or video
        service, including, without limitation, revenue
        received from telecommunications services, information
        services, or the provision of directory or Internet
        advertising, including yellow pages, white pages,
        banner advertisement, and electronic publishing or any
        other revenues attributed by the holder to noncable
        service or nonvideo service in accordance with the
        holder's books and records and records kept in the
        regular course of business and any applicable laws,
        rules, regulations, standards, or orders.
            (iv) The sale of cable services or video services
        for resale in which the purchaser is required to
        collect the service provider fee from the purchaser's
        subscribers to the extent the purchaser certifies in
        writing that it will resell the service within the
        local unit of government's jurisdiction and pay the fee
        permitted by Section 21-801(b) with respect to the
        service.
            (v) Any tax or fee of general applicability imposed
        upon the subscribers or the transaction by a city,
        State, federal, or any other governmental entity and
        collected by the holder of the State-issued
        authorization and required to be remitted to the taxing
        entity, including sales and use taxes.
            (vi) Security deposits collected from subscribers.
            (vii) Amounts paid by subscribers to "home
        shopping" or similar vendors for merchandise sold
        through any home shopping channel offered as part of
        the cable service or video service.
        (3) Revenue of an affiliate of a holder shall be
    included in the calculation of gross revenues to the extent
    the treatment of the revenue as revenue of the affiliate
    rather than the holder has the effect of evading the
    payment of the fee permitted by Section 21-801(b) of this
    Article which would otherwise be paid by the cable service
    or video service.
    (d)(1) The holder shall pay to the local unit of government
or the entity designated by that local unit of government to
manage public, education and government access, upon request as
support for public, education, and government access, a fee
equal to no less than (i) 1% of gross revenues; or (ii) if
greater, the percentage of gross revenues that incumbent cable
operators pay to the local unit of government or its designee
for public, education, and government access support in the
local unit of government's jurisdiction. For purposes of
subparagraph (d)(1)(ii) above, the percentage of gross
revenues that all incumbent cable operators pay shall be equal
to the annual sum of the payments that incumbent cable
operators in the service area are obligated to pay by
franchises and agreements or by contracts with the local
government designee for public, education and government
access in effect on January 1, 2007, including the total of any
lump sum payments required to be made over the term of each
franchise or agreement divided by the number of years of the
applicable term, divided by the annual sum of such incumbent
cable operator(s)'s gross revenues during the immediately
prior calendar year. The sum of payments includes any payments
that an incumbent cable operator is required to pay pursuant to
Section 21-301(c)(3) of this Article.
    (2) A local unit of government may require all holders of a
State-issued authorization and all cable operators franchised
by that local unit of government on the effective date hereof
in the franchise area to provide to the local unit of
government, or to the entity designated by that local unit of
government to manage public, education and government access,
information sufficient to calculate the public, education and
government access equivalent fee and any credits under
subsection (d)(1).
    (3) The fee shall be due on a quarterly basis and paid 45
days after the close of the calendar quarter. Each payment
shall include a statement explaining the basis for the
calculation of the fee. If mailed, the fee is considered paid
on the date it is postmarked. The liability of the holder for
payment of the fee under this subsection shall commence on the
same date as the payment of the service provider fee pursuant
to subsection (b) of this Section.
    (e) The holder may identify and collect the amount of the
service provider fee as a separate line item on the regular
bill of each subscriber.
    (f) The holder may identify and collect the amount of the
public, education, and government programming support fee as a
separate line item on the regular bill of each subscriber.
    (g) All determinations and computations under this Section
shall be made pursuant to the definition of gross revenues set
forth in this Section, and shall be made pursuant to generally
accepted accounting principles.
    (h) Nothing contained in this Article shall be construed to
exempt a holder from any tax that is or may later be imposed by
the local unit of government, including any tax that is or may
later be required to be paid by or through the holder with
respect to cable service or video service. A State-issued
authorization shall not affect any requirement of the holder
with respect to payment of the local unit of government's
simplified municipal telecommunications tax or any other tax as
it applies to any telephone service provided by the holder. A
State-issued authorization shall not affect any requirement of
the holder with respect to payment of the local unit of
government's 911 or E911 fees, taxes or charges.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-901 new)
    Sec. 21-901. Audits.
    (a) Upon receiving notice under Section 21-401(e)(4) that a
holder has received State-issued authorization under this
Article, a local unit of government shall notify the holder of
the requirements it imposes on other cable service or video
service providers in its jurisdiction to submit to an audit of
its books and records. The holder shall comply with the same
requirements the local unit of government imposes on other
cable service or video service providers in its jurisdiction to
audit the holder's books and records and to recompute any
amounts determined to be payable under the requirements of the
local unit of government. If all local franchises between the
local unit of government and a cable operator terminate, the
audit requirements shall be those adopted by the local
government pursuant to the Local Government Taxpayers' Bill of
Rights, 50 ILCS 45. No acceptance of amounts remitted should be
construed as an accord that the amounts are correct.
    (b) Any additional amount due after an audit shall be paid
within 30 days after the local unit of government's submission
of an invoice for the sum.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-1001 new)
    Sec. 21-1001. Local unit of government authority.
    (a) The holder of a State-issued authorization shall comply
with all the applicable construction and technical standards
and right-of-way occupancy standards set forth in a local unit
of government's code of ordinances relating to the use of
public rights-of-way, pole attachments, permit obligations,
indemnification, performance bonds, penalties or liquidated
damages. The applicable requirements for a holder that is using
its existing telecommunications network or constructing a
telecommunications network shall be the same requirements that
the local unit of government imposes on telecommunications
providers in its jurisdiction. The applicable requirements for
a holder that is using or constructing a cable system shall be
the same requirements the local unit of government imposes on
other cable operators in its jurisdiction.
    (b) A local unit of government shall allow the holder to
install, construct, operate, maintain, and remove a cable
service, video service, or telecommunications network within a
public right-of-way and shall provide the holder with open,
comparable, nondiscriminatory, and competitively neutral
access to the public right-of-way on the same terms applicable
to other cable service or video service providers or cable
operators in its jurisdiction. Notwithstanding any other
provisions of law, if a local unit of government is permitted
by law to require the holder of a State authorization to seek a
permit to install, construct, operate, maintain or remove its
cable service, video service, or telecommunications network
within a public right-of-way, those permits shall be deemed
granted within 45 days after being submitted, if not otherwise
acted upon by the local unit of government, provided the holder
complies with the requirements applicable to the holder in its
jurisdiction.
    (c) A local unit of government may impose reasonable terms,
but it may not discriminate against the holder with respect to
any of the following:
        (1) The authorization or placement of a cable service,
    video service, or telecommunications network or equipment
    in public rights-of-way.
        (2) Access to a building.
        (3) A local unit of government utility pole attachment.
    (d) If a local unit of government imposes a permit fee on
incumbent cable operators, it may impose a permit fee on the
holder only to the extent it imposes such a fee on incumbent
cable operators. In all other cases, these fees may not exceed
the actual, direct costs incurred by the local unit of
government for issuing the relevant permit. In no event may a
fee under this Section be levied if the holder already has paid
a permit fee of any kind in connection with the same activity
that would otherwise be covered by the permit fee under this
Section provided no additional equipment, work, function or
other burden is added to the existing activity for which the
permit was issued.
    (e) Nothing in this Article shall affect the rights that
any holder has under Section 4 of the Telephone Line Right of
Way Act (220 ILCS 65/4).
    (f) In addition to the other requirements in this Section,
if the holder installs, upgrades, constructs, operates,
maintains, and removes facilities or equipment within a public
right-of-way to provide cable service or video service, it
shall comply with the following:
        (1) The holder must locate its equipment in the
    right-of-way as to cause only minimum interference with the
    use of streets, alleys and other public ways and places,
    and to cause only minimum impact upon, and interference
    with the rights and reasonable convenience of property
    owners who adjoin any of the said streets, alleys or other
    public ways. No fixtures shall be placed in any public ways
    in such a manner to interfere with the usual travel on such
    public ways. Nor shall such fixtures or equipment limit the
    visibility of vehicular and/or pedestrian traffic.
        (2) The holder shall comply with a local unit of
    government's reasonable requests to place equipment on
    public property where possible, and promptly comply with
    local unit of government direction with respect to the
    location and screening of equipment and facilities. In
    constructing or upgrading its cable or video network in the
    right-of-way, the holder shall use the smallest suitable
    equipment enclosures and power pedestals and cabinets then
    in use by the holder for the application.
        (3) The holder's construction practices shall be in
    accordance with all applicable sections of the
    Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, as amended, as
    well as all applicable State laws, including the Illinois
    Administrative Code, and local codes where applicable, as
    adopted by the local unit of government. All installation
    of electronic equipment shall be of a permanent nature,
    durable and, where applicable, installed in accordance
    with the provisions of the National Electrical Safety Code
    of the National Bureau of Standards and National Electrical
    Code of the National Board of Fire Underwriters.
        (4) The holder shall not interfere with the local unit
    of government's performance of public works. Nothing in the
    State-issued authorization shall be in preference or
    hindrance to the right of the local unit of government to
    perform or carry on any public works or public improvements
    of any kind. The holder expressly agrees that it shall, at
    its own expense, protect, support, temporarily disconnect,
    relocate in the same street or other public place, or
    remove from such street or other public place, any of the
    network, system, facilities or equipment when required to
    do so by the local unit of government, because of necessary
    public health, safety and welfare improvements. In the
    event a holder and other users, including incumbent cable
    operators or utilities, of a public right-of-way are
    required to relocate and compensation is paid to the users
    of such public right-of-way, such parties shall be treated
    equally with respect to such compensation.
        (5) The holder shall comply with all local units of
    government inspection requirements. The making of
    post-construction, subsequent and/or periodic inspections
    or the failure to do so shall not operate to relieve the
    holder of any responsibility, obligation or liability.
        (6) The holder shall maintain insurance or provide
    evidence of self insurance as required by an applicable
    ordinance of the local unit of government.
        (7) The holder shall reimburse all reasonable
    make-ready expenses, including aerial and underground
    installation expenses requested by the holder to the local
    unit of government within thirty (30) days of billing to
    the holder provided that such charges shall be at the same
    rates as charges to others for the same or similar
    services.
        (8) The holder shall indemnify and hold harmless the
    local unit of government and all boards, officers,
    employees and representatives thereof from all claims,
    demands, causes of action, liability, judgments, costs and
    expenses or losses for injury or death to persons or damage
    to property owned by, and Worker's Compensation claims
    against any parties indemnified herein, arising out of,
    caused by, or as a result of the holder's construction,
    lines, cable, erection, maintenance, use or presence of, or
    removal of any poles, wires, conduit, appurtenances
    thereto, or equipment or attachments thereto. The holder,
    however, shall not indemnify the local unit of government
    for any liabilities, damages, cost and expense resulting
    from the willful misconduct or negligence of the local unit
    of government, its officers, employees and agents. The
    obligations imposed pursuant to this Section by a local
    unit of government shall be competitively neutral.
        (9) The holder, upon request, shall provide the local
    unit of government with information describing the
    location of the cable service or video service facilities
    and equipment located in the unit of local government's
    rights-of-way pursuant to its State-issued authorization.
    If designated by the holder as confidential, such
    information provided pursuant to this subsection shall be
    exempt from inspection and copying under the Illinois
    Freedom of Information Act, 5 ILCS 140/1 et seq., pursuant
    to the exemption provided for under 5 ILCS 140/7(1)(mm) and
    any other present or future exemptions applicable to such
    information and shall not be disclosed by the unit of local
    government to any third party without the written consent
    of the holder.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-1101 new)
    Sec. 21-1101. Requirements to provide video services.
    (a) The holder of a State-issued authorization shall not
deny access to cable service or video service to any potential
residential subscribers because of the race or income of the
residents in the local area in which the potential subscribers
reside.
    (b) If the holder is using telecommunications facilities to
provide cable or video service and has 1,000,000 or less
telecommunications access lines in this State, but more than
300,000 telecommunications access lines in this State, the
holder shall:
        (1) Provide access to its cable or video service to a
    number of households equal to at least 25% of its
    telecommunications access lines in this State within 3
    years after the date a holder receives a State-issued
    authorization from the Commission and to a number not less
    than 35% of these households within 5 years after the date
    a holder receives a State-issued authorization from the
    Commission; provided, however, that the holder of a
    State-issued authorization is not required to meet the 35%
    requirement in this subsection until 2 years after at least
    15% of the households with access to the holder's video
    service subscribe to the service for 6 consecutive months.
    The holder's obligation to provide such access in the State
    shall be distributed, as the holder determines, within
    three different designated market areas.
        (2) Within 3 years after the date a holder receives a
    State-issued authorization from the Commission at least
    30% of the total households with access to the holder's
    cable or video service shall be low-income.
        Within each designated market area identified in
    subsection (b)(1), the holder's obligation to offer
    service to low-income households shall be measured by each
    exchange, as that term is defined in Section 13-206 of the
    Public Utilities Act, in which the holder chooses to
    provide cable or video service. The holder is under no
    obligation to serve or provide access to an entire
    exchange; however, in addition to the statewide obligation
    to provide low-income access provided by this Section, in
    each exchange in which the holder chooses to provide cable
    or video service, the holder shall provide access to a
    percentage of low-income households that is at least equal
    to the percentage of the total low-income households within
    that exchange.
        (3) The number of telecommunication access lines in
    this Section shall be based on the number of access lines
    that exist as of the effective date of this amendatory Act
    of the 95th General Assembly.
    (c) If the holder of a State-issued authorization is using
telecommunications facilities to provide cable or video
service and has more than 1,000,000 telecommunications access
lines in this State, the holder shall:
    (1)(A) Provide access to its cable or video service to a
number of households equal to at least 35% of the households in
the holder's telecommunications service area in the State
within 3 years after the date a holder receives a State-issued
authorization from the Commission and to a number not less than
50% of these households within 5 years after the date a holder
receives a State-issued authorization from the Commission;
provided, however, that the holder of a State-issued
authorization is not required to meet the 50% requirement in
this subsection until 2 years after at least 15% of the
households with access to the holder's video service subscribe
to the service for 6 consecutive months.
    The holder's obligation to provide such access in the State
shall be distributed, as the holder determines, within three
designated market areas, one in each of the northeastern,
central and southwestern portions of the holder's
telecommunications service area in the State. The designated
market area for the northeastern portion shall consist of two
separate and distinct reporting areas: i) a city with more than
1,000,000 inhabitants, and ii) all other local units of
government on a combined basis within such designated market
area in which it offers video service.
    (B) If any state, in which a holder subject to this
subsection (c) or one of its affiliates provides or seeks to
provide cable or video service, adopts a law permitting
state-issued authorization or statewide franchises to provide
cable or video service that requires a cable or video provider
to offer service to more than 35% of the households in the
cable or video provider's service area in that state within 3
years, holders subject to this subsection (c) shall provide
service in this State to the same percentage of households
within 3 years of adoption of such law in that state.
    Furthermore, if any state, in which a holder subject to
this subsection (c) or one of its affiliates provides or seeks
to provide cable or video service, adopts a law requiring a
holder of a state-issued authorization or statewide franchises
to offer cable or video service to more than 35% of its
households if less than 15% of the households with access to
the holder's video service subscribe to the service for 6
consecutive months, then as a precondition to further
build-out, holders subject to this subsection (c) shall be
subject to the same percentage of service subscription in
meeting its obligation to provide service to 50% of the
households in this State.
    (2) Within 3 years after the date a holder receives a
State-issued authorization from the Commission at least 30% of
the total households with access to the holder's cable or video
service shall be low-income.
    Within each designated market area listed in subsection
(c)(1), the holder's obligation to offer service to low-income
households shall be measured by each exchange, as that term is
defined in Section 13-206 of the Public Utilities Act in which
the holder chooses to provide cable or video service. The
holder is under no obligation to serve or provide access to an
entire exchange; however, in addition to the statewide
obligation to provide low-income access provided by this
Section, in each exchange in which the holder chooses to
provide cable or video service, the holder shall provide access
to a percentage of low-income households that is at least equal
to the percentage of the total low-income households within
that exchange.
    (d)(1) All other holders shall only provide access to one
or more exchanges, as that term is defined in Section 13-206 of
the Public Utilities Act, or to local units of government and
shall provide access to their cable or video service to a
number of households equal to 35% of the households in the
exchange or local unit of government within 3 years after the
date a holder receives a State-issued authorization from the
Commission and to a number not less than 50% of these
households within 5 years after the date a holder receives a
State-issued authorization from the Commission, provided,
however, that if the holder is an incumbent cable operator or
any successor-in-interest company, it shall be obligated to
provide access to cable or video services within the
jurisdiction of a local unit of government at the same levels
required by the local franchising authorities for that local
unit of government on the effective date of this amendatory Act
of the 95th General Assembly.
    (2) Within 3 years after the date a holder receives a
State-issued authorization from the Commission, at least 30% of
the total households with access to the holder's cable or video
service shall be low-income.
    Within each designated exchange, as that term is defined in
Section 13-206 of the Public Utilities Act, or local unit of
government listed in subsection (d)(1), the holder's
obligation to offer service to low-income households shall be
measured by each exchange or local unit of government in which
the holder chooses to provide cable or video service. Except as
provided in subsection (d)(1), the holder is under no
obligation to serve or provide access to an entire exchange or
local unit of government; however, in addition to the statewide
obligation to provide low-income access provided by this
Section, in each exchange or local unit of government in which
the holder chooses to provide cable or video service, the
holder shall provide access to a percentage of low-income
households that is at least equal to the percentage of the
total low-income households within that exchange or local unit
of government.
    (e) A holder subject to Section 21-1101(c) shall provide
wireline broadband service, defined as wireline service
capable of supporting, in at least one direction, a speed in
excess of 200 kilobits per second (kbps), to the network
demarcation point at the subscriber's premises, to a number of
households equal to 90% of the households in the holder's
telecommunications service area by December 31, 2008, or shall
pay within 30 days of December 31, 2008 a sum of $15,000,000 to
the Digital Divide Elimination Infrastructure Fund established
pursuant to Section 13-301.3 of Article XIII of this Act, or
any successor fund established by the General Assembly. In that
event the holder is required to make a payment pursuant to this
subsection, the holder shall have no further accounting for
this payment, which shall be used in any part of the State for
the purposes established in the Digital Divide Elimination
Infrastructure Fund or for broadband deployment.
    (f) The holder of a State-issued authorization may satisfy
the requirements of subsections (b), (c) and (d) of this
Section through the use of any technology, which shall not
include direct-to-home satellite service, that offers service,
functionality, and content, which is demonstrably similar to
that provided through the holder's video service system.
    (g) In any investigation into or complaint alleging that
the holder of a State-issued authorization has failed to meet
the requirements of this Section, the following factors may be
considered in justification or mitigation or as justification
for an extension of time to meet the requirements of
subsections (b), (c) and (d) of this Section:
        (1) The inability to obtain access to public and
    private rights-of-way under reasonable terms and
    conditions.
        (2) Barriers to competition arising from existing
    exclusive service arrangements in developments or
    buildings.
        (3) The inability to access developments or buildings
    using reasonable technical solutions under commercially
    reasonable terms and conditions.
        (4) Natural disasters.
        (5) Other factors beyond the control of the holder.
    (h) If the holder relies on the factors identified in
subsection (g) in response to an investigation or complaint,
the holder shall demonstrate:
        (1) what substantial effort the holder of a
    State-issued authorization has taken to meet the
    requirements of subsections (a), (b) or (c) of this
    Section;
        (2) which portions of subsection (g) of this Section
    apply; and
        (3) the number of days it has been delayed or the
    requirements it cannot perform as a consequence of
    subsection (g) of this Section.
    (i) The factors in subsection (g) may be considered by the
Attorney General or by a court of competent jurisdiction in
determining whether the holder is in violation of this Article.
    (j) Every holder of a State-issued authorization, no later
than April 1, 2009, and annually no later than April 1
thereafter, shall report to the Commission for each of the
service areas as described in subsections (b), (c) and (d) of
this Section in which it provides access to its video service
in the State, the following information:
        (1) Cable Service and Video Service Information:
            (A) The number of households in the holder's
        telecommunications service area within each designated
        market area as described in subsections (b) and (c) of
        this Section or exchange or local unit of government as
        described in subsection (d) of this Section in which it
        offers video service.
            (B) The number of households in the holder's
        telecommunications service area within each designated
        market area as described in subsections (b) and (c) of
        this Section or exchange or local unit of government as
        described in subsection (d) of this Section that are
        offered access to video service by the holder.
            (C) The number of households in the holder's
        telecommunications service area in the State.
            (D) The number of households in the holder's
        telecommunications service area in the State that are
        offered access to video service by the holder.
        (2) Low-Income Household Information:
            (A) The number of low-income households in the
        holder's telecommunications service area within each
        designated market area as described in subsections (b)
        and (c) of this Section, as further identified in terms
        of exchanges, or exchange or local unit of government
        as described in subsection (d) of this Section, in
        which it offers video service.
            (B) The number of low-income households in the
        holder's telecommunications service area within each
        designated market area as described in subsections (b)
        and (c) of this Section, as further identified in terms
        of exchanges, or exchange or local unit of government
        as described in subsection (d) of this Section in the
        State, that are offered access to video service by the
        holder.
            (C) The number of low-income households in the
        holder's telecommunications service area in the State.
            (D) The number of low-income households in the
        holder's telecommunications service area in the State
        that are offered access to video service by the holder.
    (k) The Commission, within 30 days of receiving the first
report from holders under this Section, and annually no later
than July 1 thereafter, shall submit to the General Assembly a
report that includes, based on year-end data, the information
submitted by holders pursuant to subsections (j)(1) and (j)(2)
of this Section. The Commission shall make this report
available to any member of the public or any local unit of
government upon request. All information submitted to the
Commission and designated by holders as confidential and
proprietary shall be subject to the disclosure provisions in
Section 21-401(c). No individually identifiable customer
information shall be subject to public disclosure.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-1201 new)
    Sec. 21-1201. Multiple-unit dwellings-Interference with
Holder Prohibited.
    (a) Neither the owner of any multiple-unit residential
dwelling nor an agent or representative shall unreasonably
interfere with the right of any tenant or lawful resident
thereof to receive cable service or video service installation
or maintenance from a holder of a State-issued authorization;
provided, however, the owner, agent or representative may
require just and reasonable compensation from the holder for
its access to and use of such property to provide installation,
operation, maintenance, or removal of such cable service or
video service.
    (b) Neither the owner of any multiple-unit residential
dwelling nor an agent or representative shall ask, demand or
receive any additional payment, service or gratuity in any form
from any tenant or lawful resident thereof as a condition for
permitting or cooperating with the installation of a cable
service or video service to the dwelling unit occupied by a
tenant or resident requesting such service.
    (c) Neither the owner of any multiple-unit residential
dwelling nor an agent or representative shall penalize, charge
or surcharge a tenant or resident, or forfeit or threaten to
forfeit any right of such tenant or resident, or discriminate
in any way against such tenant or resident who requests or
receives cable service or video service from a holder.
    (d) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the owner of any
multiple-unit residential dwelling nor an agent or
representative from requiring that a holder's facilities
conform to reasonable conditions necessary to protect safety,
functioning, appearance, and value of premises or the
convenience and safety of persons or property.
    (e) The owner of any multiple-unit residential dwelling or
an agent or representative may require a holder to agree to
indemnify the owner, or his agents or representatives, for
damages or from liability for damages caused by the
installation, operation, maintenance or removal of cable
service or video service facilities.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-1301 new)
    Sec. 21-1301. Enforcement, Penalties.
    (a) The Attorney General is responsible for administering
and ensuring holders' compliance with this Article, provided
that nothing in this Article shall deprive local units of
government of the right to enforce applicable rights and
obligations.
    (b) The Attorney General may conduct an investigation
regarding possible violations by holders of this Article
including, without limitation, the issuance of subpoenas to:
        (1) require the holder to file a statement or report or
    to answer interrogatories in writing as to all information
    relevant to the alleged violations;
        (2) examine, under oath, any person who possesses
    knowledge or information related to the alleged
    violations; and
        (3) examine any record, book, document, account, or
    paper related to the alleged violation.
    (c) If the Attorney General determines that there is a
reason to believe that a holder has violated or is about to
violate this Article, the Attorney General may bring an action
in a court of competent jurisdiction in the name of the People
of the State against the holder to obtain temporary,
preliminary, or permanent injunctive relief and civil
penalties for any act, policy, or practice by the holder that
violates this Article.
    (d) If a court orders a holder to make payments to the
Attorney General and the payments are to be used for the
operations of the Office of the Attorney General or if a holder
agrees to make payments to the Attorney General for the
operations of the Office of the Attorney General as part of an
Assurance of Voluntary Compliance, then the moneys paid under
any of the conditions described in this subsection shall be
deposited into the Attorney General Court Ordered and Voluntary
Compliance Payment Projects Fund. Moneys in the Fund shall be
used, subject to appropriation, for the performance of any
function pertaining to the exercise of the duties to the
Attorney General including, but not limited to, enforcement of
any law of this State and conducting public education programs;
however, any moneys in the Fund that are required by the court
to be used for a particular purpose shall be used for that
purpose.
    (e) In an action against a holder brought pursuant to this
Article, the Attorney General may seek the assessment of one or
more of the following civil monetary penalties in any action
filed under this Article where the holder violates this Article
and does not remedy the violation within 30 days of notice by
the Attorney General:
        (1) Any holder that violates or fails to comply with
    any of the provisions of this Article or of its
    State-issued authorization shall be subject to a civil
    penalty of up to $30,000 for each and every offense, or
    .00825% of the holder's gross revenues, as defined in
    Section 21-801, whichever is greater. Every violation of
    the provisions of this Article by a holder is a separate
    and distinct offense, provided, however, that if the same
    act or omission violates more than one provision of this
    Article, only one penalty or cumulative penalty may be
    imposed for such act or omission. In case of a continuing
    violation, each day's continuance thereof shall be a
    separate and distinct offense, provided, however, that the
    cumulative penalty for any continuing violation shall not
    exceed $500,000 per year, and provided further that these
    limits shall not apply where the violation was intentional
    and either (i) created substantial risk to the safety of
    the cable service or video service provider's employees or
    customers or the public or (ii) was intended to cause
    economic benefits to accrue to the violator.
        (2) The holder's State-issued authorization may be
    suspended or revoked if the holder fails to comply with the
    provisions of this Article after a reasonable time to
    achieve compliance has passed.
        (3) If the holder is in violation of Section 21-1101,
    in addition to any other remedies provided by law, a fine
    not to exceed 3% of the holder's total monthly gross
    revenue as that term is defined in this Article, shall be
    imposed for each month from the date of violation until the
    date that compliance is achieved.
        (4) Nothing in this Section shall limit or affect the
    powers of the Attorney General to enforce the provisions of
    the Cable and Video Customer Protection Law, 220 ILCS
    5/70-501 new, or the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business
    Practices Act, 815 ILCS 505.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-1401 new)
    Sec. 21-1401. Home rule.
    (a) The provisions of this Article are a limitation of home
rule powers under subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of
the Illinois Constitution.
    (b) Nothing in this Article shall be construed to limit or
deny a home rule unit's power to tax as set forth in Section 6
of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-1501 new)
    Sec. 21-1501. Except as otherwise provided in this Article,
this Article shall be enforced only by a court of competent
jurisdiction.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/21-1601 new)
    Sec. 21-1601. Repealer. This Article is repealed October 1,
2013.
 
    Section 15-7. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is
amended by changing Section 1-5 as follows:
 
    (5 ILCS 100/1-5)  (from Ch. 127, par. 1001-5)
    Sec. 1-5. Applicability.
    (a) This Act applies to every agency as defined in this
Act. Beginning January 1, 1978, in case of conflict between the
provisions of this Act and the Act creating or conferring power
on an agency, this Act shall control. If, however, an agency
(or its predecessor in the case of an agency that has been
consolidated or reorganized) has existing procedures on July 1,
1977, specifically for contested cases or licensing, those
existing provisions control, except that this exception
respecting contested cases and licensing does not apply if the
Act creating or conferring power on the agency adopts by
express reference the provisions of this Act. Where the Act
creating or conferring power on an agency establishes
administrative procedures not covered by this Act, those
procedures shall remain in effect.
    (b) The provisions of this Act do not apply to (i)
preliminary hearings, investigations, or practices where no
final determinations affecting State funding are made by the
State Board of Education, (ii) legal opinions issued under
Section 2-3.7 of the School Code, (iii) as to State colleges
and universities, their disciplinary and grievance
proceedings, academic irregularity and capricious grading
proceedings, and admission standards and procedures, and (iv)
the class specifications for positions and individual position
descriptions prepared and maintained under the Personnel Code.
Those class specifications shall, however, be made reasonably
available to the public for inspection and copying. The
provisions of this Act do not apply to hearings under Section
20 of the Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act.
    (c) Section 5-35 of this Act relating to procedures for
rulemaking does not apply to the following:
        (1) Rules adopted by the Pollution Control Board that,
    in accordance with Section 7.2 of the Environmental
    Protection Act, are identical in substance to federal
    regulations or amendments to those regulations
    implementing the following: Sections 3001, 3002, 3003,
    3004, 3005, and 9003 of the Solid Waste Disposal Act;
    Section 105 of the Comprehensive Environmental Response,
    Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980; Sections 307(b),
    307(c), 307(d), 402(b)(8), and 402(b)(9) of the Federal
    Water Pollution Control Act; and Sections 1412(b),
    1414(c), 1417(a), 1421, and 1445(a) of the Safe Drinking
    Water Act.
        (2) Rules adopted by the Pollution Control Board that
    establish or amend standards for the emission of
    hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide from gasoline powered
    motor vehicles subject to inspection under Section 13A-105
    of the Vehicle Emissions Inspection Law and rules adopted
    under Section 13B-20 of the Vehicle Emissions Inspection
    Law of 1995.
        (3) Procedural rules adopted by the Pollution Control
    Board governing requests for exceptions under Section 14.2
    of the Environmental Protection Act.
        (4) The Pollution Control Board's grant, pursuant to an
    adjudicatory determination, of an adjusted standard for
    persons who can justify an adjustment consistent with
    subsection (a) of Section 27 of the Environmental
    Protection Act.
        (5) Rules adopted by the Pollution Control Board that
    are identical in substance to the regulations adopted by
    the Office of the State Fire Marshal under clause (ii) of
    paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of Section 2 of the
    Gasoline Storage Act.
    (d) Pay rates established under Section 8a of the Personnel
Code shall be amended or repealed pursuant to the process set
forth in Section 5-50 within 30 days after it becomes necessary
to do so due to a conflict between the rates and the terms of a
collective bargaining agreement covering the compensation of
an employee subject to that Code.
    (e) Section 10-45 of this Act shall not apply to any
hearing, proceeding, or investigation conducted under Section
13-515 of the Public Utilities Act.
    (f) Article 10 of this Act does not apply to any hearing,
proceeding, or investigation conducted by the State Council for
the State of Illinois created under Section 3-3-11.05 of the
Unified Code of Corrections or by the Interstate Commission
Commision for Adult Offender Supervision created under the
Interstate Compact for Adult Offender Supervision.
    (g) This Act is subject to the provisions of Article XXI of
the Public Utilities Act. To the extent that any provision of
this Act conflicts with the provisions of that Article XXI, the
provisions of that Article XXI control.
(Source: P.A. 92-571, eff. 6-26-02; revised 7-25-02.)
 
    Section 15-10. The Attorney General Act is amended by
changing Section 6.5 as follows:
 
    (15 ILCS 205/6.5)
    Sec. 6.5. Consumer Utilities Unit.
    (a) The General Assembly finds that the health, welfare,
and prosperity of all Illinois citizens, and the public's
interest in adequate, safe, reliable, cost-effective electric,
natural gas, water, cable, video, and telecommunications
services, requires effective public representation by the
Attorney General to protect the rights and interests of the
public in the provision of all elements of electric, natural
gas, water, cable, video, and telecommunications service both
during and after the transition to a competitive market, and
that to ensure that the benefits of competition in the
provision of electric, natural gas, water, cable, video, and
telecommunications services to all consumers are attained,
there shall be created within the Office of the Attorney
General a Consumer Utilities Unit.
    (b) As used in this Section: "Electric services" means
services sold by an electric service provider. "Electric
service provider" shall mean anyone who sells, contracts to
sell, or markets electric power, generation, distribution,
transmission, or services (including metering and billing) in
connection therewith. Electric service providers shall include
any electric utility and any alternative retail electric
supplier as defined in Section 16-102 of the Public Utilities
Act.
    (b-5) As used in this Section: "Telecommunications
services" means services sold by a telecommunications carrier,
as provided for in Section 13-203 of the Public Utilities Act.
"Telecommunications carrier" means anyone who sells, contracts
to sell, or markets telecommunications services, whether
noncompetitive or competitive, including access services,
interconnection services, or any services in connection
therewith. Telecommunications carriers include any carrier as
defined in Section 13-202 of the Public Utilities Act.
    (b-10) As used in this Section: "natural gas services"
means natural gas services sold by a "gas utility" or by an
"alternative gas supplier", as those terms are defined in
Section 19-105 of the Public Utilities Act.
    (b-15) As used in this Section: "water services" means
services sold by any corporation, company, limited liability
company, association, joint stock company or association,
firm, partnership, or individual, its lessees, trustees, or
receivers appointed by any court and that owns, controls,
operates, or manages within this State, directly or indirectly,
for public use, any plant, equipment, or property used or to be
used for or in connection with (i) the production, storage,
transmission, sale, delivery, or furnishing of water or (ii)
the treatment, storage, transmission, disposal, sale of
services, delivery, or furnishing of sewage or sewage services.
    (b-20) As used in this Section: "cable service and video
service" means services sold by anyone who sells, contracts to
sell or markets cable services or video services pursuant to a
State-issued authorization under the Cable and Video
Competition Law of 2007.
    (c) There is created within the Office of the Attorney
General a Consumer Utilities Unit, consisting of Assistant
Attorneys General appointed by the Attorney General, who,
together with such other staff as is deemed necessary by the
Attorney General, shall have the power and duty on behalf of
the people of the State to intervene in, initiate, enforce, and
defend all legal proceedings on matters relating to the
provision, marketing, and sale of electric, natural gas, water,
and telecommunications service whenever the Attorney General
determines that such action is necessary to promote or protect
the rights and interests of all Illinois citizens, classes of
customers, and users of electric, natural gas, water, and
telecommunications services.
    (d) In addition to the investigative and enforcement powers
available to the Attorney General, including without
limitation those under the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive
Business Practices Act, the Illinois Antitrust Act, and any
other law of this State, the Attorney General shall be a party
as a matter of right to all proceedings, investigations, and
related matters involving the provision of electric, natural
gas, water, and telecommunications services before the
Illinois Commerce Commission, the courts, and other public
bodies. Upon request, the Office of the Attorney General shall
have access to and the use of all files, records, data, and
documents in the possession or control of the Commission. The
Office of the Attorney General may use information obtained
under this Section, including information that is designated as
and that qualifies for confidential treatment, which
information the Attorney General's office shall maintain as
confidential, to be used for law enforcement purposes only,
which information may be shared with other law enforcement
officials. Nothing in this Section is intended to take away or
limit any of the powers the Attorney General has pursuant to
common law or other statutory law.
(Source: P.A. 94-291, eff. 7-21-05.)
 
    Section 15-15. The Counties Code is amended by changing
Section 5-1095 and by adding Section 5-1096.5 as follows:
 
    (55 ILCS 5/5-1095)  (from Ch. 34, par. 5-1095)
    Sec. 5-1095. Community antenna television systems;
satellite transmitted television programming.
    (a) The County Board may license, tax or franchise the
business of operating a community antenna television system or
systems within the County and outside of a municipality, as
defined in Section 1-1-2 of the Illinois Municipal Code.
    When an area is annexed to a municipality, the annexing
municipality shall thereby become the franchising authority
with respect to that portion of any community antenna
television system that, immediately before annexation, had
provided cable television services within the annexed area
under a franchise granted by the county, and the owner of that
community antenna television system shall thereby be
authorized to provide cable television services within the
annexed area under the terms and provisions of the existing
franchise. In that instance, the franchise shall remain in
effect until, by its terms, it expires, except that any
franchise fees payable under the franchise shall be payable
only to the county for a period of 5 years or until, by its
terms, the franchise expires, whichever occurs first. After the
5 year period, any franchise fees payable under the franchise
shall be paid to the annexing municipality. In any instance in
which a duly franchised community antenna television system is
providing cable television services within the annexing
municipality at the time of annexation, the annexing
municipality may permit that franchisee to extend its community
antenna television system to the annexed area under terms and
conditions that are no more burdensome nor less favorable to
that franchisee than those imposed under any community antenna
television franchise applicable to the annexed area at the time
of annexation. The authorization to extend cable television
service to the annexed area and any community antenna
television system authorized to provide cable television
services within the annexed area at the time of annexation
shall not be subject to the provisions of subsection (e) of
this Section.
    (b) "Community antenna television system" as used in this
Section, means any facility which is constructed in whole or in
part in, on, under or over any highway or other public place
and which is operated to perform for hire the service of
receiving and amplifying the signals broadcast by one or more
television stations and redistributing such signals by wire,
cable or other means to members of the public who subscribe to
such service except that such term does not include (i) any
system which serves fewer than 50 subscribers or (ii) any
system which serves only the residents of one or more apartment
dwellings under common ownership, control or management, and
commercial establishments located on the premises of such
dwellings.
    (c) The authority hereby granted does not include the
authority to license or franchise telephone companies subject
to the jurisdiction of the Illinois Commerce Commission or the
Federal Communications Commission in connection with
furnishing circuits, wires, cables or other facilities to the
operator of a community antenna television system.
    (c-1) Each franchise entered into by a county and a
community antenna television system shall include the customer
service and privacy standards and protections contained in the
Cable and Video Customers Protection Law. A franchise may not
contain different penalties, consumer service and privacy
standards and protections. Each franchise entered into by a
county and a community antenna television system before the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General
Assembly shall be amended by this Section to incorporate the
penalty provisions, customer service and privacy standards and
protections contained in the Cable and Video Customers
Protection Law.
    The County Board may, in the course of franchising such
community antenna television system, grant to such franchisee
the authority and the right and permission to use all public
streets, rights of way, alleys, ways for public service
facilities, parks, playgrounds, school grounds, or other
public grounds, in which such county may have an interest, for
the construction, installation, operation, maintenance,
alteration, addition, extension or improvement of a community
antenna television system.
    Any charge imposed by a community antenna television system
franchised pursuant to this Section for the raising or removal
of cables or lines to permit passage on, to or from a street
shall not exceed the reasonable costs of work reasonably
necessary to safely permit such passage. Pursuant to
subsections (h) and (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the
Constitution of the State of Illinois, the General Assembly
declares the regulation of charges which may be imposed by
community antenna television systems for the raising or removal
of cables or lines to permit passage on, to or from streets is
a power or function to be exercised exclusively by the State
and not to be exercised or performed concurrently with the
State by any unit of local government, including any home rule
unit.
    The County Board may, upon written request by the
franchisee of a community antenna television system, exercise
its right of eminent domain solely for the purpose of granting
an easement right no greater than 8 feet in width, extending no
greater than 8 feet from any lot line for the purpose of
extending cable across any parcel of property in the manner
provided for by the law of eminent domain, provided, however,
such franchisee deposits with the county sufficient security to
pay all costs incurred by the county in the exercise of its
right of eminent domain.
    Except as specifically provided otherwise in this Section,
this Section is not a limitation on any home rule county.
    (d) The General Assembly finds and declares that
satellite-transmitted television programming should be
available to those who desire to subscribe to such programming
and that decoding devices should be obtainable at reasonable
prices by those who are unable to obtain satellite-transmitted
television programming through duly franchised community
antenna television systems.
    In any instance in which a person is unable to obtain
satellite-transmitted television programming through a duly
franchised community antenna television system either because
the municipality and county in which such person resides has
not granted a franchise to operate and maintain a community
antenna television system, or because the duly franchised
community antenna television system operator does not make
cable television services available to such person, any
programming company that delivers satellite-transmitted
television programming in scrambled or encrypted form shall
ensure that devices for decryption of such programming are made
available to such person, through the local community antenna
television operator or directly, for purchase or lease at
prices reasonably related to the cost of manufacture and
distribution of such devices.
    (e) The General Assembly finds and declares that, in order
to ensure that community antenna television services are
provided in an orderly, competitive and economically sound
manner, the best interests of the public will be served by the
establishment of certain minimum standards and procedures for
the granting of additional cable television franchises.
    Subject to the provisions of this subsection, the authority
granted under subsection (a) hereof shall include the authority
to license, franchise and tax more than one cable operator to
provide community antenna television services within the
territorial limits of a single franchising authority. For
purposes of this subsection (e), the term:
        (i) "Existing cable television franchise" means a
    community antenna television franchise granted by a county
    which is in use at the time such county receives an
    application or request by another cable operator for a
    franchise to provide cable antenna television services
    within all or any portion of the territorial area which is
    or may be served under the existing cable television
    franchise.
        (ii) "Additional cable television franchise" means a
    franchise pursuant to which community antenna television
    services may be provided within the territorial areas, or
    any portion thereof, which may be served under an existing
    cable television franchise.
        (iii) "Franchising Authority" is defined as that term
    is defined under Section 602(9) of the Cable Communications
    Policy Act of 1984, Public Law 98-549.
        (iv) "Cable operator" is defined as that term is
    defined under Section 602(4) of the Cable Communications
    Policy Act of 1984, Public Law 98-549.
    Before granting an additional cable television franchise,
the franchising authority shall:
        (1) Give written notice to the owner or operator of any
    other community antenna television system franchised to
    serve all or any portion of the territorial area to be
    served by such additional cable television franchise,
    identifying the applicant for such additional franchise
    and specifying the date, time and place at which the
    franchising authority shall conduct public hearings to
    consider and determine whether such additional cable
    television franchise should be granted.
        (2) Conduct a public hearing to determine the public
    need for such additional cable television franchise, the
    capacity of public rights-of-way to accommodate such
    additional community antenna television services, the
    potential disruption to existing users of public
    rights-of-way to be used by such additional franchise
    applicant to complete construction and to provide cable
    television services within the proposed franchise area,
    the long term economic impact of such additional cable
    television system within the community, and such other
    factors as the franchising authority shall deem
    appropriate.
        (3) Determine, based upon the foregoing factors,
    whether it is in the best interest of the county to grant
    such additional cable television franchise.
        (4) If the franchising authority shall determine that
    it is in the best interest of the county to do so, it may
    grant the additional cable television franchise. Except as
    provided in paragraph (5) of this subsection (e), no such
    additional cable television franchise shall be granted
    under terms or conditions more favorable or less burdensome
    to the applicant than those required under the existing
    cable television franchise, including but not limited to
    terms and conditions pertaining to the territorial extent
    of the franchise, system design, technical performance
    standards, construction schedules, performance bonds,
    standards for construction and installation of cable
    television facilities, service to subscribers, public
    educational and governmental access channels and
    programming, production assistance, liability and
    indemnification, and franchise fees.
        (5) Unless the existing cable television franchise
    provides that any additional cable television franchise
    shall be subject to the same terms or substantially
    equivalent terms and conditions as those of the existing
    cable television franchise, the franchising authority may
    grant an additional cable television franchise under
    different terms and conditions than those of the existing
    franchise, in which event the franchising authority shall
    enter into good faith negotiations with the existing
    franchisee and shall, within 120 days after the effective
    date of the additional cable television franchise, modify
    the existing cable television franchise in a manner and to
    the extent necessary to ensure that neither the existing
    cable television franchise nor the additional cable
    television franchise, each considered in its entirety,
    provides a competitive advantage over the other, provided
    that prior to modifying the existing cable television
    franchise, the franchising authority shall have conducted
    a public hearing to consider the proposed modification. No
    modification in the terms and conditions of the existing
    cable television franchise shall oblige the existing cable
    television franchisee (1) to make any additional payment to
    the franchising authority, including the payment of any
    additional franchise fee, (2) to engage in any additional
    construction of the existing cable television system or,
    (3) to modify the specifications or design of the existing
    cable television system; and the inclusion of the factors
    identified in items (2) and (3) shall not be considered in
    determining whether either franchise considered in its
    entirety, has a competitive advantage over the other except
    to the extent that the additional franchisee provides
    additional video or data services or the equipment or
    facilities necessary to generate and or carry such service.
    No modification in the terms and conditions of the existing
    cable television franchise shall be made if the existing
    cable television franchisee elects to continue to operate
    under all terms and conditions of the existing franchise.
        If within the 120 day period the franchising authority
    and the existing cable television franchisee are unable to
    reach agreement on modifications to the existing cable
    television franchise, then the franchising authority shall
    modify the existing cable television franchise, effective
    45 days thereafter, in a manner, and only to the extent,
    that the terms and conditions of the existing cable
    television franchise shall no longer impose any duty or
    obligation on the existing franchisee which is not also
    imposed under the additional cable television franchise;
    however, if by the modification the existing cable
    television franchisee is relieved of duties or obligations
    not imposed under the additional cable television
    franchise, then within the same 45 days and following a
    public hearing concerning modification of the additional
    cable television franchise within that 45 day period, the
    franchising authority shall modify the additional cable
    television franchise to the extent necessary to insure that
    neither the existing cable television franchise nor the
    additional cable television franchise, each considered in
    its entirety, shall have a competitive advantage over the
    other.
    No county shall be subject to suit for damages based upon
the county's determination to grant or its refusal to grant an
additional cable television franchise, provided that a public
hearing as herein provided has been held and the franchising
authority has determined that it is in the best interest of the
county to grant or refuse to grant such additional franchise,
as the case may be.
    It is declared to be the law of this State, pursuant to
paragraphs (h) and (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the
Illinois Constitution, that the establishment of minimum
standards and procedures for the granting of additional cable
television franchises as provided in this subsection (e) is an
exclusive State power and function that may not be exercised
concurrently by a home rule unit.
(Source: P.A. 90-14, eff. 7-1-97; 90-285, eff. 7-31-97.)
 
    (55 ILCS 5/5-1096.5 new)
    Sec. 5-1096.5. Cable and video competition.
    (a) A person or entity seeking to provide cable service or
video service in this State after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly shall either (1)
obtain a State-issued authorization pursuant to Section 401 of
the Cable and Video Competition Law of 2007 (220 ILCS
5/21-401); (2) obtain authorization pursuant to Section
11-42-11 of the Illinois Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11);
or (3) obtain authorization pursuant to Section 5-1095 of the
Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/5-1095).
    (b) A person or entity seeking to provide cable service or
video service in this State after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly shall not use the
public rights-of-way for the installation or construction of
facilities for the provision of cable service or video service
or offer cable service or video service until it has (i)
obtained a State-issued authorization to offer or provide cable
or video service under Section 401 of the Cable and Video
Competition Law of 2007; (ii) obtained authorization under
Section 11-42-11 of the Illinois Municipal Code; (iii) or
obtained authorization under Section 5-1095 of the Counties
Code. Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a local unit of
government from granting a permit to a person or entity for the
use of the public rights-of-way to install or construct
facilities to provide cable service or video service, at its
sole discretion. No unit of local government shall be liable
for denial or delay of a permit prior to the issuance of a
State-issued authorization.
    (c) For the purposes of Section 5-1095(e), a State-issued
authorization under Article XXI of the Public Utilities Act
shall be considered substantially equivalent in terms and
conditions as an existing cable provider.
    (d) Nothing in Article XXI of the Public Utilities Act
shall constitute a basis for modification of an existing cable
franchise or an injunction against or for the recovery of
damages from a municipality pursuant to Section 5-1095(e)
because of an application for or the issuance of a State-issued
authorization under that Article XXI.
 
    Section 15-20. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by
changing Section 11-42-11 and by adding Section 11-42-11.2 as
follows:
 
    (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-42-11)
    Sec. 11-42-11. Community antenna television systems;
satellite transmitted television programming.
    (a) The corporate authorities of each municipality may
license, franchise and tax the business of operating a
community antenna television system as hereinafter defined. In
municipalities with less than 2,000,000 inhabitants, the
corporate authorities may, under the limited circumstances set
forth in this Section, own (or lease as lessee) and operate a
community antenna television system; provided that a
municipality may not acquire, construct, own, or operate a
community antenna television system for the use or benefit of
private consumers or users, and may not charge a fee for that
consumption or use, unless the proposition to acquire,
construct, own, or operate a cable antenna television system
has been submitted to and approved by the electors of the
municipality in accordance with subsection (f). Before
acquiring, constructing, or commencing operation of a
community antenna television system, the municipality shall
comply with the following:
        (1) Give written notice to the owner or operator of any
    other community antenna television system franchised to
    serve all or any portion of the territorial area to be
    served by the municipality's community antenna television
    system, specifying the date, time, and place at which the
    municipality shall conduct public hearings to consider and
    determine whether the municipality should acquire,
    construct, or commence operation of a community antenna
    television system. The public hearings shall be conducted
    at least 14 days after this notice is given.
        (2) Publish a notice of the hearing in 2 or more
    newspapers published in the county, city, village,
    incorporated town, or town, as the case may be. If there is
    no such newspaper, then notice shall be published in any 2
    or more newspapers published in the county and having a
    general circulation throughout the community. The public
    hearings shall be conducted at least 14 days after this
    notice is given.
        (3) Conduct a public hearing to determine the means by
    which construction, maintenance, and operation of the
    system will be financed, including whether the use of tax
    revenues or other fees will be required.
    (b) The words "community antenna television system" shall
mean any facility which is constructed in whole or in part in,
on, under or over any highway or other public place and which
is operated to perform for hire the service of receiving and
amplifying the signals broadcast by one or more television
stations and redistributing such signals by wire, cable or
other means to members of the public who subscribe to such
service; except that such definition shall not include (i) any
system which serves fewer than fifty subscribers, or (ii) any
system which serves only the residents of one or more apartment
dwellings under common ownership, control or management, and
commercial establishments located on the premises of such
dwellings.
    (c) The authority hereby granted does not include authority
to license, franchise or tax telephone companies subject to
jurisdiction of the Illinois Commerce Commission or the Federal
Communications Commission in connection with the furnishing of
circuits, wires, cables, and other facilities to the operator
of a community antenna television system.
    (c-1) Each franchise entered into by a municipality and a
community antenna television system shall include the customer
service and privacy standards and protections contained in the
Cable and Video Customers Protection Law. A franchise may not
contain different penalties, consumer service and privacy
standards and protections. Each franchise entered into by a
municipality and a community antenna television system before
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 95th General
Assembly shall be amended by this Section to incorporate the
penalty provisions, customer service and privacy standards and
protections contained in the Cable and Video Customers
Protection Law.
    The corporate authorities of each municipality may, in the
course of franchising such community antenna television
system, grant to such franchisee the authority and the right
and permission to use all public streets, rights of way,
alleys, ways for public service facilities, parks,
playgrounds, school grounds, or other public grounds, in which
such municipality may have an interest, for the construction,
installation, operation, maintenance, alteration, addition,
extension or improvement of a community antenna television
system.
    Any charge imposed by a community antenna television system
franchised pursuant to this Section for the raising or removal
of cables or lines to permit passage on, to or from a street
shall not exceed the reasonable costs of work reasonably
necessary to safely permit such passage. Pursuant to
subsections (h) and (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the
Constitution of the State of Illinois, the General Assembly
declares the regulation of charges which may be imposed by
community antenna television systems for the raising or removal
of cables or lines to permit passage on, to or from streets is
a power or function to be exercised exclusively by the State
and not to be exercised or performed concurrently with the
State by any unit of local government, including any home rule
unit.
    The municipality may, upon written request by the
franchisee of a community antenna television system, exercise
its right of eminent domain solely for the purpose of granting
an easement right no greater than 8 feet in width, extending no
greater than 8 feet from any lot line for the purpose of
extending cable across any parcel of property in the manner
provided by the law of eminent domain, provided, however, such
franchisee deposits with the municipality sufficient security
to pay all costs incurred by the municipality in the exercise
of its right of eminent domain.
    (d) The General Assembly finds and declares that
satellite-transmitted television programming should be
available to those who desire to subscribe to such programming
and that decoding devices should be obtainable at reasonable
prices by those who are unable to obtain satellite-transmitted
television programming through duly franchised community
antenna television systems.
    In any instance in which a person is unable to obtain
satellite-transmitted television programming through a duly
franchised community antenna television system either because
the municipality and county in which such person resides has
not granted a franchise to operate and maintain a community
antenna television system, or because the duly franchised
community antenna television system operator does not make
cable television services available to such person, any
programming company that delivers satellite-transmitted
television programming in scrambled or encrypted form shall
ensure that devices for description of such programming are
made available to such person, through the local community
antenna television operator or directly, for purchase or lease
at prices reasonably related to the cost of manufacture and
distribution of such devices.
    (e) The General Assembly finds and declares that, in order
to ensure that community antenna television services are
provided in an orderly, competitive and economically sound
manner, the best interests of the public will be served by the
establishment of certain minimum standards and procedures for
the granting of additional cable television franchises.
    Subject to the provisions of this subsection, the authority
granted under subsection (a) hereof shall include the authority
to license, franchise and tax more than one cable operator to
provide community antenna television services within the
corporate limits of a single franchising authority. For
purposes of this subsection (e), the term:
        (i) "Existing cable television franchise" means a
    community antenna television franchise granted by a
    municipality which is in use at the time such municipality
    receives an application or request by another cable
    operator for a franchise to provide cable antenna
    television services within all or any portion of the
    territorial area which is or may be served under the
    existing cable television franchise.
        (ii) "Additional cable television franchise" means a
    franchise pursuant to which community antenna television
    services may be provided within the territorial areas, or
    any portion thereof, which may be served under an existing
    cable television franchise.
        (iii) "Franchising Authority" is defined as that term
    is defined under Section 602(9) of the Cable Communications
    Policy Act of 1984, Public Law 98-549, but does not include
    any municipality with a population of 1,000,000 or more.
        (iv) "Cable operator" is defined as that term is
    defined under Section 602(4) of the Cable Communications
    Policy Act of 1984, Public Law 98-549.
    Before granting an additional cable television franchise,
the franchising authority shall:
        (1) Give written notice to the owner or operator of any
    other community antenna television system franchised to
    serve all or any portion of the territorial area to be
    served by such additional cable television franchise,
    identifying the applicant for such additional franchise
    and specifying the date, time and place at which the
    franchising authority shall conduct public hearings to
    consider and determine whether such additional cable
    television franchise should be granted.
        (2) Conduct a public hearing to determine the public
    need for such additional cable television franchise, the
    capacity of public rights-of-way to accommodate such
    additional community antenna television services, the
    potential disruption to existing users of public
    rights-of-way to be used by such additional franchise
    applicant to complete construction and to provide cable
    television services within the proposed franchise area,
    the long term economic impact of such additional cable
    television system within the community, and such other
    factors as the franchising authority shall deem
    appropriate.
        (3) Determine, based upon the foregoing factors,
    whether it is in the best interest of the municipality to
    grant such additional cable television franchise.
        (4) If the franchising authority shall determine that
    it is in the best interest of the municipality to do so, it
    may grant the additional cable television franchise.
    Except as provided in paragraph (5) of this subsection (e),
    no such additional cable television franchise shall be
    granted under terms or conditions more favorable or less
    burdensome to the applicant than those required under the
    existing cable television franchise, including but not
    limited to terms and conditions pertaining to the
    territorial extent of the franchise, system design,
    technical performance standards, construction schedules,
    performance bonds, standards for construction and
    installation of cable television facilities, service to
    subscribers, public educational and governmental access
    channels and programming, production assistance, liability
    and indemnification, and franchise fees.
        (5) Unless the existing cable television franchise
    provides that any additional cable television franchise
    shall be subject to the same terms or substantially
    equivalent terms and conditions as those of the existing
    cable television franchise, the franchising authority may
    grant an additional cable television franchise under
    different terms and conditions than those of the existing
    franchise, in which event the franchising authority shall
    enter into good faith negotiations with the existing
    franchisee and shall, within 120 days after the effective
    date of the additional cable television franchise, modify
    the existing cable television franchise in a manner and to
    the extent necessary to ensure that neither the existing
    cable television franchise nor the additional cable
    television franchise, each considered in its entirety,
    provides a competitive advantage over the other, provided
    that prior to modifying the existing cable television
    franchise, the franchising authority shall have conducted
    a public hearing to consider the proposed modification. No
    modification in the terms and conditions of the existing
    cable television franchise shall oblige the existing cable
    television franchisee (1) to make any additional payment to
    the franchising authority, including the payment of any
    additional franchise fee, (2) to engage in any additional
    construction of the existing cable television system or,
    (3) to modify the specifications or design of the existing
    cable television system; and the inclusion of the factors
    identified in items (2) and (3) shall not be considered in
    determining whether either franchise considered in its
    entirety, has a competitive advantage over the other except
    to the extent that the additional franchisee provides
    additional video or data services or the equipment or
    facilities necessary to generate and or carry such service.
    No modification in the terms and conditions of the existing
    cable television franchise shall be made if the existing
    cable television franchisee elects to continue to operate
    under all terms and conditions of the existing franchise.
        If within the 120 day period the franchising authority
    and the existing cable television franchisee are unable to
    reach agreement on modifications to the existing cable
    television franchise, then the franchising authority shall
    modify the existing cable television franchise, effective
    45 days thereafter, in a manner, and only to the extent,
    that the terms and conditions of the existing cable
    television franchise shall no longer impose any duty or
    obligation on the existing franchisee which is not also
    imposed under the additional cable television franchise;
    however, if by the modification the existing cable
    television franchisee is relieved of duties or obligations
    not imposed under the additional cable television
    franchise, then within the same 45 days and following a
    public hearing concerning modification of the additional
    cable television franchise within that 45 day period, the
    franchising authority shall modify the additional cable
    television franchise to the extent necessary to insure that
    neither the existing cable television franchise nor the
    additional cable television franchise, each considered in
    its entirety, shall have a competitive advantage over the
    other.
    No municipality shall be subject to suit for damages based
upon the municipality's determination to grant or its refusal
to grant an additional cable television franchise, provided
that a public hearing as herein provided has been held and the
franchising authority has determined that it is in the best
interest of the municipality to grant or refuse to grant such
additional franchise, as the case may be.
    It is declared to be the law of this State, pursuant to
paragraphs (h) and (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the
Illinois Constitution, that the establishment of minimum
standards and procedures for the granting of additional cable
television franchises by municipalities with a population less
than 1,000,000 as provided in this subsection (e) is an
exclusive State power and function that may not be exercised
concurrently by a home rule unit.
    (f) No municipality may acquire, construct, own, or operate
a community antenna television system unless the corporate
authorities adopt an ordinance. The ordinance must set forth
the action proposed; describe the plant, equipment, and
property to be acquired or constructed; and specifically
describe the manner in which the construction, acquisition, and
operation of the system will be financed.
    The ordinance may not take effect until the question of
acquiring, construction, owning, or operating a community
antenna television system has been submitted to the electors of
the municipality at a regular election and approved by a
majority of the electors voting on the question. The corporate
authorities must certify the question to the proper election
authority, which must submit the question at an election in
accordance with the Election Code.
    The question must be submitted in substantially the
following form:
        Shall the ordinance authorizing the municipality to
    (insert action authorized by ordinance) take effect?
The votes must be recorded as "Yes" or "No".
    If a majority of electors voting on the question vote in
the affirmative, the ordinance shall take effect.
    Not more than 30 or less than 15 days before the date of
the referendum, the municipal clerk must publish the ordinance
at least once in one or more newspapers published in the
municipality or, if no newspaper is published in the
municipality, in one or more newspapers of general circulation
within the municipality.
(Source: P.A. 90-285, eff. 7-31-97; 91-648, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
    (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11.2 new)
    Sec. 11-42-11.2. Cable and video competition.
    (a) A person or entity seeking to provide cable service or
video service in this State after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly shall either (1)
obtain a State-issued authorization pursuant to Section 401 of
the Cable and Video Competition Law of 2007; (2) obtain
authorization pursuant to Section 11-42-11 of the Illinois
Municipal Code; or (3) obtain authorization pursuant to Section
5-1095 of the Counties Code. All providers offering or
providing cable or video service in this State shall have
authorization pursuant to either (i) the Cable and Video
Competition Law of 2007; (ii) Section 11-42-11 of the Illinois
Municipal Code; (iii) Section 5-1095 of the Counties Code.
    (b) A person or entity seeking to provide cable service or
video service in this State after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly shall not use the
public rights-of-way for the installation or construction of
facilities for the provision of cable service or video service
or offer cable service or video service until it has (i)
obtained a State-issued authorization to offer or provide cable
or video service under Section 401 of the Cable and Video
Competition Law of 2007; (ii) obtained authorization under
Section 11-42-11 of the Illinois Municipal Code; (iii) or
obtained authorization under Section 5-1095 of the Counties
Code. Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a local unit of
government from granting a permit to a person or entity for the
use of the public rights-of-way to install or construct
facilities to provide cable service or video service, at its
sole discretion. No unit of local government shall be liable
for denial or delay of a permit prior to the issuance of a
State-issued authorization.
    (c) For the purposes of Section 11-42-11(e), a State-issued
authorization under Article XXI of the Public Utilities Act
shall be considered substantially equivalent in terms and
conditions as an existing cable provider.
    (d) Nothing in Article XXI of the Public Utilities Act
shall constitute a basis for modification of an existing cable
franchise or an injunction against or for the recovery of
damages from a municipality pursuant to Section 11-42-11
because of an application for or the issuance of a State-issued
authorization under that Article XXI.
 
    Section 15-25. The Public Utilities Act is amended by
adding the heading of Article 70 and Sections 13-507.1, 70-501,
70-502, and 70-503 as follows:
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-507.1 new)
    Sec. 13-507.1. In any proceeding permitting, approving,
investigating, or establishing rates, charges,
classifications, or tariffs for telecommunications services
classified as noncompetitive offered or provided by an
incumbent local exchange carrier as that term is defined in
Section 13-202.1 of the Public Utilities Act, the Commission
shall not allow any subsidy of Internet services, cable
services, or video services by the rates or charges for local
exchange telecommunications services, including local services
classified as noncompetitive.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/Art. 70 heading new)
ARTICLE 70. CABLE AND VIDEO CUSTOMER PROTECTION LAW

 
    (220 ILCS 5/70-501 new)
    Sec. 70-501. Customer service and privacy protection. All
cable or video providers in this State shall comply with the
following customer service requirements and privacy
protections. The provisions of this Act shall not apply to an
incumbent cable operator prior to January 1, 2008. For purposes
of this paragraph, an incumbent cable operator means a person
or entity that provided cable services in a particular area
under a franchise agreement with a local unit of government
pursuant to Section 11-42-11 of the Illinois Municipal Code or
Section 5-1095 of the Counties Code on January 1, 2007. A
master antenna television, satellite master antenna
television, direct broadcast satellite, multipoint
distribution service, and other provider of video programming
shall only be subject to the provisions of this Article to the
extent permitted by federal law. The following definitions
apply to the terms used in this Article:
    "Basic cable or video service" means any service offering
or tier which includes the retransmission of local television
broadcast signals.
    "Cable or video provider" means any person or entity
providing cable service or video service pursuant to
authorization under (i) the Cable and Video Competition Law of
2007; (ii) Section 11-42-11 of the Illinois Municipal Code;
(iii) Section 5-1095 of the Counties Code; or (iv) a master
antenna television, satellite master antenna television,
direct broadcast satellite, multipoint distribution services,
and other providers of video programming, whatever their
technology. A cable or video provider shall not include a
landlord providing only broadcast video programming to a
single-family home or other residential dwelling consisting of
four units or less.
    "Franchise" has the same meaning as found in 47 U.S.C.
522(9).
    "Local unit of government" means a city, village,
incorporated town, or a county.
    "Normal business hours" means those hours during which most
similar businesses in the geographic area of the local unit of
government are open to serve customers. In all cases, "normal
business hours" must include some evening hours at least one
night per week or some weekend hours.
    "Normal operating conditions" means those service
conditions that are within the control of cable or video
providers. Those conditions that are not within the control of
cable or video providers include, but are not limited to,
natural disasters, civil disturbances, power outages,
telephone network outages, and severe or unusual weather
conditions. Those conditions that are ordinarily within the
control of cable or video providers include, but are not
limited to, special promotions, pay-per-view events, rate
increases, regular peak or seasonal demand periods, and
maintenance or upgrade of the cable service or video service
network.
    "Service interruption" means the loss of picture or sound
on one or more cable service or video service on one or more
cable or video channels.
    "Service line drop" means the point of connection between a
premises and the cable or video network that enables the
premises to receive cable service or video service.
        (a) General customer service standards:
            (1) Cable or video providers shall establish
        general standards related to customer service, which
        shall include, but not be limited to, installation,
        disconnection, service and repair obligations;
        appointment hours, and employee ID requirements;
        customer service telephone numbers and hours;
        procedures for billing, charges, deposits, refunds,
        and credits; procedures for termination of service;
        notice of deletion of programming service, changes
        related to transmission of programming; changes or
        increases in rates; the use and availability of
        parental control or lock-out devices; the use and
        availability of A/B switch if applicable; complaint
        procedures and procedures for bill dispute resolution;
        a description of the rights and remedies available to
        consumers if the cable or video provider does not
        materially meet their customer service standards; and
        special services for customers with visual, hearing or
        mobility disabilities.
            (2) Cable or video providers' rates for each level
        of service, rules, regulations and policies related to
        its cable service or video service described in
        subsection (a)(1) must be made available to the public
        and displayed clearly and conspicuously on the cable or
        video provider's site on the Internet. If a promotional
        price or a price for a specified period of time is
        offered, the cable or video provider shall display the
        price at the end of the promotional period or specified
        period of time clearly and conspicuously with the
        display of the promotional price or price for a
        specified period of time. The cable or video provider
        shall provide this information upon request.
            (3) Cable or video providers shall provide notice
        concerning their general customer service standards to
        all customers. This notice shall be offered when
        service is first activated and annually thereafter.
        The information in the notice shall include all of the
        information specified in subsection (a)(1), as well as
        the following: a listing of services offered by the
        cable or video providers, which shall clearly describe
        programming for all services and all levels of service;
        the rates for all services and levels of service;
        telephone number(s) through which customers may
        subscribe to, change, or terminate service, request
        customer service or seek general or billing
        information; instructions on the use of the cable or
        video services; and, a description of rights and
        remedies that the cable or video providers shall make
        available to their customers if they do not materially
        meet the general customer service standards described
        in this Act.
        (b) General customer service obligations:
            (1) Cable or video providers shall render
        reasonably efficient service, promptly make repairs,
        and interrupt service only as necessary and for good
        cause, during periods of minimum use of the system and
        for no more than 24 hours.
            (2) All service representatives or any other
        person who contacts customers or potential customers
        on behalf of the cable or video provider shall have a
        visible identification card with their name and
        photograph and shall orally identify themselves upon
        first contact with the customer. Customer service
        representatives shall orally identify themselves to
        callers immediately following the greeting during each
        telephone contact with the public.
            (3) The cable or video providers shall: (i)
        maintain a customer service facility within the
        boundaries of a local unit of government staffed by
        customer service representatives that have the
        capacity to accept payment, adjust bills, respond to
        repair, installation, reconnection, disconnection, or
        other service calls; distribute or receive converter
        boxes, remote control units, digital stereo units or
        other equipment related to the provision of cable or
        video service; or (ii) provide customers with bill
        payment facilities through retail, financial, or other
        commercial institutions located within the boundaries
        of a local unit of government; or (iii) provide an
        address, toll-free telephone number or electronic
        address to accept bill payments and correspondence,
        and provide secure collection boxes for the receipt of
        bill payments and the return of equipment, provided
        that if a cable or video provider provides secure
        collection boxes, it shall provide a printed receipt
        when items are deposited; or (iv) provide an address,
        toll-free telephone number or electronic address to
        accept bill payments and correspondence, and provide a
        method for customers to return equipment to the cable
        or video provider at no cost to the customer.
            (4) In each contact with a customer, the service
        representatives or any other person who contacts
        customers or potential customers on behalf of the cable
        or video provider, shall state the estimated cost of
        the service, repair, or installation orally prior to
        delivery of the service or before any work is
        performed, and shall provide the customer with an oral
        statement of the total charges before terminating the
        telephone call or other contact in which a service is
        ordered, whether in-person or over the Internet, and
        shall provide a written statement of the total charges
        before leaving the location at which the work was
        performed. In the event that the cost of service is a
        promotional price or is for a limited period of time,
        the cost of service at the end of the promotion or
        limited period of time shall be disclosed.
            (5) Cable or video providers shall provide
        customers a minimum of 30 days' written notice before
        increasing rates or eliminating transmission of
        programming and shall submit the notice to the local
        unit of government in advance of distribution to
        customers, provided that the cable or video provider is
        not in violation of this provision if the elimination
        of transmission of programming was outside the control
        of the provider, in which case the provider shall use
        reasonable efforts to provide as much notice as
        possible and any rate decrease related to the
        elimination of transmission of programming shall be
        applied to the date of the change.
            (6) Cable or video providers shall provide clear
        visual and audio reception that meets or exceeds
        applicable Federal Communications Commission technical
        standards. If a customer experiences poor video or
        audio reception due to the equipment of the cable or
        video provider, the cable or video provider shall
        promptly repair the problem at its own expense.
        (c) Bills, payment and termination:
            (1) Cable or video providers shall render monthly
        bills that are clear, accurate and understandable.
            (2) Every residential customer who pays bills
        directly to the cable or video provider shall have at
        least 28 days from the date of the bill to pay the
        listed charges.
            (3) Customer payments shall be posted promptly.
        When the payment is sent by United States Mail, payment
        is considered paid on the date it is postmarked.
            (4) Cable or video providers may not terminate
        residential service for nonpayment of a bill unless the
        cable or video provider furnishes notice of the
        delinquency and impending termination at least 21 days
        prior to the proposed termination. Notice of proposed
        termination shall be mailed, postage prepaid, to the
        customer to whom service is billed. Notice of proposed
        termination shall not be mailed until the 29th day
        after the date of the bill for services. Notice of
        delinquency and impending termination may be part of a
        billing statement only if the notice is presented in a
        different color than the bill and is designed to be
        conspicuous. The cable or video providers may not
        assess a late fee prior to the 29th day after the date
        of the bill for service.
            (5) Every notice of impending termination shall
        include all of the following: name and address of
        customer; amount of delinquency; date on which payment
        is required to avoid termination; and the telephone
        number of the cable or video provider's service
        representative to make payment arrangements and to
        provide additional information about the charges for
        failure to return equipment and for reconnection, if
        any. No customer may be charged a fee for termination
        or disconnection of service, irrespective of whether
        the customer initiated termination or disconnection or
        the cable or video provider initiated termination or
        disconnection.
            (6) Service may only be terminated on days when the
        customer is able to reach a service representative of
        the cable or video providers, either in person or by
        telephone.
            (7) Any service terminated by a cable or video
        provider without good cause shall be restored without
        any reconnection fee, charge or penalty; good cause for
        termination includes, but is not limited to, failure to
        pay a bill by the date specified in the notice of
        impending termination, payment by check for which
        there are insufficient funds, theft of service, abuse
        of equipment or personnel or other similar subscriber
        actions.
            (8) Cable or video providers shall cease charging a
        customer for any or all services within 1 business day
        after it receives a request to immediately terminate
        service or on the day requested by the customer if such
        a date is at least 5 days from the date requested by
        the customer. Nothing in this subsection shall
        prohibit the provider from billing for charges that the
        customer incurs prior to the date of termination. Cable
        or video providers shall issue a credit, a refund, or
        return a deposit within 10 business days after the
        close of the customer's billing cycle following the
        request for termination or the return of equipment, if
        any, whichever is later.
            (9) The customers or subscribers of a cable or
        video provider shall be allowed to disconnect their
        service at any time within the first 60 days after
        subscribing to or upgrading the service. Within this
        60-day period, cable or video providers shall not
        charge or impose any fees or penalties on the customer
        for disconnecting service, including, but not limited
        to, any installation charge, the imposition of an early
        termination charge, except the cable or video provider
        may impose a charge or fee to offset any rebates or
        credits received by the customer, and may impose
        monthly service or maintenance charges, including
        pay-per-view and premium services charges, during such
        60-day period.
            (10) Cable and video providers shall guarantee
        customer satisfaction for new or upgraded service and
        the customer shall receive a pro-rata credit in an
        amount equal to the pro-rata charge for the remaining
        days of service being disconnected or replaced upon the
        customers request if the customer is dissatisfied with
        the service and requests to discontinue the service
        within the first 60 days after subscribing to the
        upgraded service.
        (d) Response to customer inquiries:
            (1) Cable or video providers will maintain a
        toll-free telephone access line that will be available
        to customers 24 hours a day, seven days a week, to
        accept calls regarding installation, termination,
        service, and complaints. Trained, knowledgeable,
        qualified service representatives of the cable or
        video providers will be available to respond to
        customer telephone inquiries during normal business
        hours. Customer service representatives shall be able
        to provide credit, waive fees, schedule appointments
        and change billing cycles. Any difficulties that
        cannot be resolved by the customer service
        representatives shall be referred to a supervisor who
        shall make best efforts to resolve the issue
        immediately. If the supervisor does not resolve the
        issue to the customer's satisfaction, the customer
        shall be informed of the cable or video provider's
        complaint procedures and procedures for billing
        dispute resolution and given a description of the
        rights and remedies available to customers to enforce
        the terms of this Article, including the customer's
        rights to have the complaint reviewed by the local unit
        of government, to request mediation, and to review in a
        court of competent jurisdiction.
            (2) After normal business hours, the access line
        may be answered by a service or an automated response
        system, including an answering machine. Inquiries
        received by telephone or e-mail after normal business
        hours shall be responded to by a trained service
        representative on the next business day. The cable or
        video provider shall respond to a written billing
        inquiry within 10 days of receipt of the inquiry.
            (3) Cable or video providers shall provide
        customers seeking non-standard installations with a
        total installation cost estimate and an estimated date
        of completion. The actual charge to the customer shall
        not exceed 10% of the estimated cost without the
        written consent of the customer.
            (4) If the cable or video provider receives notice
        that an unsafe condition exists with respect to its
        equipment, it shall investigate such condition
        immediately, and shall take such measures as are
        necessary to remove or eliminate the unsafe condition.
        The cable or video provider shall inform the local unit
        of government promptly, but no later than 2 hours after
        it receives notification of an unsafe condition that it
        has not remedied.
            (5) Under normal operating conditions, telephone
        answer time by the cable or video provider's customer
        representative, including wait time, shall not exceed
        30 seconds when the connection is made. If the call
        needs to be transferred, transfer time shall not exceed
        30 seconds. These standards shall be met no less than
        90% of the time under normal operating conditions,
        measured on a quarterly basis.
            (6) Under normal operating conditions, the cable
        or video provider's customers will receive a busy
        signal less than 3% of the time.
        (e) Installations, Outages and Service Calls. Under
    normal operating conditions, each of the following
    standards related to installations, outages and service
    calls will be met no less than 95% of the time measured on
    a quarterly basis:
            (1) Standard installations will be performed
        within 7 business days after an order has been placed.
        "Standard" installations are those that are located up
        to 125 feet from the existing distribution system;
            (2) Excluding conditions beyond the control of the
        cable or video providers, the cable or video providers
        will begin working on "service interruptions" promptly
        and in no event later than 24 hours after the
        interruption is reported by the customer or otherwise
        becomes known to the cable or video providers. Cable or
        video providers must begin actions to correct other
        service problems the next business day after
        notification of the service problem and correct the
        problem within 48 hours after the interruption is
        reported by the customer 95% of the time, measured on a
        quarterly basis;
            (3) The "appointment window" alternatives for
        installations, service calls, and other installation
        activities will be either a specific time or, at a
        maximum, a four hour time block during evening, weekend
        and normal business hours. The cable or video provider
        may schedule service calls and other installation
        activities outside of these hours for the express
        convenience of the customer; and
            (4) Cable or video providers may not cancel an
        appointment with a customer after 5:00 p.m. on the
        business day prior to the scheduled appointment. If the
        cable or video provider's representative is running
        late for an appointment with a customer and will not be
        able to keep the appointment as scheduled, the customer
        will be contacted. The appointment will be
        rescheduled, as necessary, at a time which is
        convenient for the customer, even if the rescheduled
        appointment is not within normal business hours.
        (f) Public benefit obligation:
            (1) All cable or video providers offering service
        pursuant to the Cable and Video Competition Law of
        2007, the Illinois Municipal Code, or the Counties
        Code, shall provide a free service line drop and free
        basic service to all current and future public
        buildings within their footprint, including, but not
        limited to, all local unit of government buildings,
        public libraries, and public primary and secondary
        schools, whether owned or leased by that local unit of
        government ("eligible buildings"). Such service shall
        be used in a manner consistent with the government
        purpose for the eligible building and shall not be
        resold.
            (2) This obligation only applies to those cable or
        video service providers whose cable service or video
        service systems pass eligible buildings and its cable
        or video service is generally available to residential
        subscribers in the same local unit of government in
        which the eligible building is located. The burden of
        providing such service at each eligible building shall
        be shared by all cable and video providers whose
        systems pass the eligible buildings in an equitable and
        competitively neutral manner, and nothing herein shall
        require duplicative installations by more than one
        cable or video provider at each eligible building.
        Cable or video providers operating in a local unit of
        government shall meet as necessary and determine who
        will provide service to eligible buildings under this
        subsection. If the cable or video providers are unable
        to reach agreement, they shall meet with the local unit
        of government which shall determine which cable or
        video providers will serve each eligible building. The
        local unit of government shall bear the costs of any
        inside wiring or video equipment costs not ordinarily
        provided as part of the cable or video provider's basic
        offering.
        (g) After the cable or video providers have offered
    service for one (1) year, the cable or video providers
    shall make an annual report to the Commission, the local
    unit of government and to the Attorney General that it is
    meeting the standards specified in this Article,
    identifying the number of complaints it received over the
    prior year in the State, and specifying the number of
    complaints related to each of the following: (1) billing,
    charges, refunds, credits; (2) installation or termination
    of service; (3) quality of service and repair; (4)
    programming; and (5) miscellaneous complaints that do not
    fall within these categories. Thereafter, the cable or
    video providers shall also provide, upon request by the
    local unit of government where service is offered and to
    the Attorney General, an annual public report that includes
    performance data described in subsections (d)(5), (d)(6),
    (e)(1) and (e)(2) of this Section for cable services or
    video services. The performance data shall be
    disaggregated for each requesting local unit of government
    or local exchange, as that term is defined in Section
    13-206 of the Public Utilities Act, in which the cable or
    video providers have customers.
        (h) To the extent consistent with federal law, cable or
    video providers shall offer the lowest-cost basic cable or
    video service as a stand-alone service to residential
    customers at reasonable rates. Cable or video providers
    shall not require the subscription to any service other
    than the lowest-cost basic service or to any
    telecommunications or information service, as a condition
    of access to cable or video service, including programming
    offered on a per channel or per program basis. Cable or
    video providers shall not discriminate between subscribers
    to the lowest-cost basic service, subscribers to other
    cable services or video services, and other subscribers
    with regard to the rates charged for cable or video
    programming offered on a per channel or per program basis.
        (i) To the extent consistent with federal law, cable or
    video providers shall ensure that charges for changes in
    the subscriber's selection of services or equipment shall
    be based on the cost of such change and shall not exceed
    nominal amounts when the system's configuration permits
    changes in service tier selection to be effected solely by
    coded entry on a computer terminal or by other similarly
    simple method.
        (j) To the extent consistent with federal law, cable or
    video providers shall have a rate structure for the
    provision of cable or video service that is uniform
    throughout the area within the boundaries of the local unit
    of government. This subsection is not intended to prohibit
    bulk discounts to multiple dwelling units or to prohibit
    reasonable discounts to senior citizens or other
    economically disadvantaged groups.
        (k) To the extent consistent with federal law, cable or
    video providers shall not charge a subscriber for any
    service or equipment that the subscriber has not
    affirmatively requested by name. For purposes of this
    subsection, a subscriber's failure to refuse a cable or
    video provider's proposal to provide service or equipment
    shall not be deemed to be an affirmative request for such
    service or equipment.
        (l) No contract or service offering cable services or
    video services or any bundle including such services shall
    be for a term longer than one year. Any contract or service
    offering with a term of service that contains an early
    termination fee shall limit the early termination fee to
    not more than the amount of the discount reflected in the
    price for cable services or video services for the period
    during which the consumer benefited from the discount.
        (m) Cable or video providers shall not discriminate in
    the provision of services for the hearing and visually
    impaired, and shall comply with the accessibility
    requirements of 47 U.S.C. 613. Cable or video providers
    shall deliver and pick-up, or provide customers with
    pre-paid shipping and packaging for the return of,
    converters and other necessary equipment at the home of
    customers with disabilities. Cable or video providers
    shall provide free use of a converter or remote control
    unit to mobility impaired customers.
        (n)(1) To the extent consistent with federal law, cable
    or video providers shall comply with the provisions of 47
    U.S.C. 532(h) and (j). The cable or video providers shall
    not exercise any editorial control over any video
    programming provided pursuant to this Section, or in any
    other way consider the content of such programming, except
    that a cable or video provider may refuse to transmit any
    leased access program or portion of a leased access program
    which contains obscenity, indecency, or nudity and may
    consider such content to the minimum extent necessary to
    establish a reasonable price for the commercial use of
    designated channel capacity by an unaffiliated person.
    This subsection shall permit cable or video providers to
    enforce prospectively a written and published policy of
    prohibiting programming that the cable or video provider
    reasonably believes describes or depicts sexual or
    excretory activities or organs in a patently offensive
    manner as measured by contemporary community standards.
            (2) Upon customer request, the cable or video
        provider shall, without charge, fully scramble or
        otherwise fully block the audio and video programming
        of each channel carrying such programming so that a
        person who is not a subscriber does not receive the
        channel or programming.
            (3) In providing sexually explicit adult
        programming or other programming that is indecent on
        any channel of its service primarily dedicated to
        sexually oriented programming, the cable or video
        provider shall fully scramble or otherwise fully block
        the video and audio portion of such channel so that one
        not a subscriber to such channel or programming does
        not receive it.
            (4) Scramble means to rearrange the content of the
        signal of the programming so that the programming
        cannot be viewed or heard in an understandable manner.
        (o) Cable or video providers will maintain a listing,
    specific to the level of street address, of the areas where
    its cable or video services are available. Customers who
    inquire about purchasing cable or video service shall be
    informed about whether the cable or video provider's cable
    or video services are currently available to them at their
    specific location.
        (p) Privacy protections. Cable or video providers
    shall not disclose the name, address, telephone number or
    other personally identifying information of a cable
    service or video service customer to be used in mailing
    lists or to be used for other commercial purposes not
    reasonably related to the conduct of its business unless
    the cable or video provider has provided to the customer a
    notice, separately or included in any other customer
    service notice, that clearly and conspicuously describes
    the customer's ability to prohibit the disclosure. Cable or
    video providers shall provide an address and telephone
    number for a customer to use without toll charge to prevent
    disclosure of the customer's name and address in mailing
    lists or for other commercial purposes not reasonably
    related to the conduct of its business to other businesses
    or affiliates of the cable or video provider. Cable or
    video providers shall comply with the consumer privacy
    requirements of the Communications Consumer Privacy Act,
    the Restricted Call Registry Act, and 47 U.S.C. 551 that
    are in effect as of the effective date of this amendatory
    Act of the 95th General Assembly, and as amended
    thereafter.
        (q) Cable or video providers shall implement an
    informal process for handling inquiries from local units of
    government and customers concerning billing issues,
    service issues, privacy concerns and other consumer
    complaints. In the event an issue is not resolved through
    this informal process, a local unit of government or the
    customer may request nonbinding mediation with the cable or
    video provider, with each party to bear its own costs of
    such mediation. Selection of the mediator will be by mutual
    agreement, and preference will be given to mediation
    services that do not charge the consumer for their
    services. In the event the informal process does not
    produce a satisfactory result to the customer or the local
    unit of government, enforcement may be pursued as provided
    in subsection (r)(4).
        (r) The Attorney General and the local unit of
    government may enforce all of the customer service and
    privacy protection standards of this Section with respect
    to complaints received from residents within the local unit
    of government's jurisdiction, but it may not adopt or seek
    to enforce any additional or different customer service or
    performance standards under any other authority or
    provision of law.
            (1) The local unit of government may, by ordinance,
        provide a schedule of penalties for any material breach
        of this Section by cable or video providers in addition
        to the penalties provided herein. No monetary
        penalties shall be assessed for a material breach if it
        is out of the reasonable control of the cable or video
        providers or its affiliate. Monetary penalties adopted
        in an ordinance pursuant to this Section shall apply on
        a competitively neutral basis to all providers of cable
        service or video service within the local unit of
        government's jurisdiction and in no event shall the
        penalties imposed under this subsection exceed $750
        for each day of the material breach, and shall not
        exceed $25,000 for each occurrence of a material breach
        per customer.
            (2) For purposes of this Section, "material
        breach" means any substantial failure of a cable or
        video service provider to comply with service quality
        and other standards specified in any provision of this
        Act. The Attorney General or the local unit of
        government shall give the cable or video provider
        written notice of any alleged material breaches of this
        Act and allow such provider at least 30 days from
        receipt of the notice to remedy the specified material
        breach.
            (3) A material breach, for the purposes of
        assessing penalties, shall be deemed to have occurred
        for each day that a material breach has not been
        remedied by the cable service or video service provider
        after the expiration of the period specified in
        subsection (r)(2) in each local unit of government's
        jurisdiction, irrespective of the number of customers
        affected.
            (4) Any customer, the Attorney General, or local
        unit of government may pursue alleged violations of
        this Act by the cable or video provider in a court of
        competent jurisdiction. A cable or video provider may
        seek judicial review of a decision of a local unit of
        government imposing penalties in a court of competent
        jurisdiction. No local unit of government shall be
        subject to suit for damages or other relief based upon
        its action in connection with its enforcement or review
        of any of the terms, conditions, and rights contained
        in this Act except a court may require the return of
        any penalty it finds was not properly assessed or
        imposed.
        (s) Cable or video providers shall credit customers for
    violations in the amounts stated herein. The credits shall
    be applied on the statement issued to the customer for the
    next monthly billing cycle following the violation or
    following the discovery of the violation. Cable or video
    providers are responsible for providing the credits
    described herein and the customer is under no obligation to
    request the credit. If the customer is no longer taking
    service from the cable or video provider, the credit amount
    will be refunded to the customer by check within 30 days of
    the termination of service. A local unit of government may,
    by ordinance, adopt a schedule of credits payable directly
    to customers for breach of the customer service standards
    and obligations contained in this Article, provided the
    schedule of customer credits applies on a competitively
    neutral basis to all providers of cable service or video
    service in the local unit of government's jurisdiction and
    the credits are not greater than the credits provided in
    this Section.
            (1) Failure to provide notice of customer service
        standards upon initiation of service: $25.00.
            (2) Failure to install service within 7 days:
        Waiver of 50% of the installation fee or the monthly
        fee for the lowest-cost basic service, whichever is
        greater. Failure to install service within 14 days:
        Waiver of 100% of the installation fee or the monthly
        fee for the lowest-cost basic service, whichever is
        greater.
            (3) Failure to remedy service interruptions or
        poor video or audio service quality within 48 hours:
        Pro-rata credit of total regular monthly charges equal
        to the number of days of the service interruption.
            (4) Failure to keep an appointment or to notify the
        customer prior to the close of business on the business
        day prior to the scheduled appointment: $25.00.
            (5) Violation of privacy protections: $150.00.
            (6) Failure to comply with scrambling
        requirements: $50.00 per month.
            (7) Violation of customer service and billing
        standards in subsections (c) and (d): $25.00 per
        occurrence.
            (8) Violation of the bundling rules in Section (h):
        $25.00 per month.
        (t) The enforcement powers granted to the Attorney
    General in Article XXI of the Public Utilities Act shall
    apply to this Act, except that the Attorney General may not
    seek penalties for violation of this Act other than in the
    amounts specified herein. Nothing in this Section shall
    limit or affect the powers of the Attorney General to
    enforce the provisions of Article 21 of the Public
    Utilities Act or the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business
    Practices Act.
        (u) This Act applies to all cable and video providers
    in the State, including but not limited to those operating
    under a local franchise as that term is used in 47 U.S.C.
    522(9), those operating under authorization pursuant to
    Section 11-42-11 of the Municipal Code, those operating
    under authorization pursuant to Section 5-1095 of the
    Counties Code, and those operating under a State-issued
    authorization pursuant to Article XXI of the Public
    Utilities Act.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/70-502 new)
    Sec. 70-502. The provisions of this Article are a
limitation of home rule powers under subsection (h) of Section
6 of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/70-503 new)
    Sec. 70-503. The provisions of this Article are severable
under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
    Section 15-30. The State Mandates Act is amended by adding
Section 8.31 as follows:
 
    (30 ILCS 805/8.31 new)
    Sec. 8.31. Exempt mandate. Notwithstanding Sections 6 and 8
of this Act, no reimbursement by the State is required for the
implementation of any mandate created by this amendatory Act of
the 95th General Assembly.
 
ARTICLE 99.

 
    Section 99-999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.