Public Act 096-0927
 
SB0107 Enrolled LRB096 05740 MJR 15810 b

    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The High Speed Internet Services and Information
Technology Act is amended by changing Sections 20 and 25 as
follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 661/20)
    Sec. 20. Duties of the enlisted nonprofit organization.
    (a) The high speed Internet deployment strategy and demand
creation initiative to be performed by the nonprofit
organization shall include, but not be limited to, the
following actions:
        (1) Create a geographic statewide inventory of high
    speed Internet service and other relevant broadband and
    information technology services. The inventory shall:
            (A) identify geographic gaps in high speed
        Internet service through a method of GIS mapping of
        service availability and GIS analysis at the census
        block level; and
            (B) provide a baseline assessment of statewide
        high speed Internet deployment in terms of percentage
        of Illinois households with high speed Internet
        availability; and .
            (C) collect from Facilities-based Providers of
        Broadband Connections to End User Locations the
        information provided pursuant to the agreements
        entered into with the non-profit organization as of the
        effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th
        General Assembly or similar information from
        Facilities-based Providers of Broadband Connections to
        End User Locations that do not have the agreements on
        said date.
            For the purposes of item (C), "Facilities-based
        Providers of Broadband Connections to End User
        Locations" shall have the same meaning as that term is
        defined in Section 13-407 of the Public Utilities Act.
        (2) Track and identify, through customer interviews
    and surveys and other publicly available sources,
    statewide residential and business adoption of high speed
    Internet, computers, and related information technology
    and any barriers to adoption.
        (3) Build and facilitate in each county or designated
    region a local technology planning team with members
    representing a cross section of the community, including,
    but not limited to, representatives of business, K-12
    education, health care, libraries, higher education,
    community-based organizations, local government, tourism,
    parks and recreation, and agriculture. Each team shall
    benchmark technology use across relevant community
    sectors, set goals for improved technology use within each
    sector, and develop a plan for achieving its goals, with
    specific recommendations for online application
    development and demand creation.
        (4) Collaborate with high speed Internet providers and
    technology companies to encourage deployment and use,
    especially in underserved areas, by aggregating local
    demand, mapping analysis, and creating market intelligence
    to improve the business case for providers to deploy.
        (5) Collaborate with the Department in developing a
    program to increase computer ownership and broadband
    access for disenfranchised populations across the State.
    The program may include grants to local community
    technology centers that provide technology training,
    promote computer ownership, and increase broadband access.
        (6) Collaborate with the Department and the Illinois
    Commerce Commission regarding the collection of the
    information required by this Section to assist in
    monitoring and analyzing the broadband markets and the
    status of competition and deployment of broadband services
    to consumers in the State, including the format of
    information requested, provided the Commission enters into
    the proprietary and confidentiality agreements governing
    such information.
    (b) The nonprofit organization may apply for federal grants
consistent with the objectives of this Act.
    (c) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
shall use the funds in the High Speed Internet Services and
Information Technology Fund to (1) provide grants to the
nonprofit organization enlisted under this Act and (2) for any
costs incurred by the Department to administer this Act.
    (d) The nonprofit organization shall have the power to
obtain or to raise funds other than the grants received from
the Department under this Act.
    (e) The nonprofit organization and its Board of Directors
shall exist separately and independently from the Department
and any other governmental entity, but shall cooperate with
other public or private entities it deems appropriate in
carrying out its duties.
    (f) Notwithstanding anything in this Act or any other Act
to the contrary, any information that is designated
confidential or proprietary by an entity providing the
information to the nonprofit organization or any other entity
to accomplish the objectives of this Act shall be deemed
confidential, proprietary, and a trade secret and treated by
the nonprofit organization or anyone else possessing the
information as such and shall not be disclosed.
    (g) The nonprofit organization shall provide a report to
the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability on
an annual basis for the first 3 complete State fiscal years
following its enlistment.
(Source: P.A. 95-684, eff. 10-19-07.)
 
    (20 ILCS 661/25)
    Sec. 25. Scope of authority. Nothing in this Act shall be
construed as giving the Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity, the nonprofit organization, or other entities any
additional authority, regulatory or otherwise, over providers
of telecommunications, broadband, and information technology.
However, the Department shall have the authority to require
Facilities-based Providers of Broadband Connections to End
User Locations to provide information pursuant to subsection
(c) of Section 20. Upon request, any and all information
collected pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 20 that is
provided to the enlisted nonprofit organization shall be
provided to the Department, provided the Department enters into
the proprietary and confidentiality agreements governing such
information.
(Source: P.A. 95-684, eff. 10-19-07.)
 
    Section 10. The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing
Sections 13-101, 13-202, 13-301, 13-406, 13-407, 13-503,
13-505, 13-509, 13-703, 13-704, 13-712, 13-1200, and 22-501 and
by adding Sections 13-234, 13-235, 13-401.1, 13-506.2, 13-804,
13-900.1, and 13-900.2 as follows:
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-101)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-101)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-101. Application of Act to telecommunications
rates and services. Except to the extent modified or
supplemented by the specific provisions of this Article, the
Sections of this Act pertaining to public utilities, public
utility rates and services, and the regulation thereof, are
fully and equally applicable to noncompetitive
telecommunications rates and services, and the regulation
thereof, except where the context clearly renders such
provisions inapplicable. Except to the extent modified or
supplemented by the specific provisions of this Article,
Articles I through V, Sections 8-301, 8-305, 8-502, 8-503,
8-505, 8-509, 8-509.5, 8-510, 9-221, 9-222, 9-222.1, 9-222.2,
9-250, and 9-252.1, and Article Articles X and XI of this Act
are fully and equally applicable to competitive
telecommunications rates and services, and the regulation
thereof except that Section 9-250 shall not apply to
competitive retail telecommunications services; in addition,
as to competitive telecommunications rates and services, and
the regulation thereof, and with the exception of competitive
retail telecommunications service rates and services, all
rules and regulations made by a telecommunications carrier
affecting or pertaining to its charges or service to the public
shall be just and reasonable, provided that nothing in this
Section shall be construed to prevent a telecommunications
carrier from accepting payment electronically or by the use of
a customer-preferred financially accredited credit or debit
methodology. As of the effective date of this amendatory Act of
the 92nd General Assembly, Sections 4-202, 4-203, and 5-202 of
this Act shall cease to apply to telecommunications rates and
services.
(Source: P.A. 92-22, eff. 6-30-01.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-202)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-202)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-202. "Telecommunications carrier" means and
includes every corporation, company, association, joint stock
company or association, firm, partnership or individual, their
lessees, trustees or receivers appointed by any court
whatsoever 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, or owns or controls any franchise, license, permit or
right to engage in the provision of, telecommunications
services between points within the State which are specified by
the user. "Telecommunications carrier" includes an Electing
Provider, as defined in Section 13-506.2. Telecommunications
carrier does not include, however:
    (a) telecommunications carriers that are owned and
operated by any political subdivision, public or private
institution of higher education or municipal corporation of
this State, for their own use, or telecommunications carriers
that are owned by such political subdivision, public or private
institution of higher education, or municipal corporation and
operated by any of its lessees or operating agents, for their
own use;
    (b) telecommunications carriers which are purely mutual
concerns, having no rates or charges for services, but paying
the operating expenses by assessment upon the members of such a
company and no other person but does include telephone or
telecommunications cooperatives as defined in Section 13-212;
    (c) a company or person which provides telecommunications
services solely to itself and its affiliates or members or
between points in the same building, or between closely located
buildings, affiliated through substantial common ownership,
control or development; or
    (d) a company or person engaged in the delivery of
community antenna television services as described in
subdivision (c) of Section 13-203, except with respect to the
provision of telecommunications services by that company or
person.
(Source: P.A. 87-856.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-234 new)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-234. Interconnected voice over Internet protocol
service. "Interconnected voice over Internet protocol service"
or "Interconnected VoIP service" has the meaning prescribed in
47 CFR 9.3 as defined on the effective date of this amendatory
Act of the 96th General Assembly or as amended thereafter.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-235 new)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-235. Interconnected voice over Internet protocol
provider. "Interconnected voice over Internet protocol
provider" or "Interconnected VoIP provider" means and includes
every corporation, company, association, joint stock company
or association, firm, partnership, or individual, their
lessees, trustees, or receivers appointed by any court
whatsoever that owns, controls, operates, manages, or provides
within this State, directly or indirectly, Interconnected
voice over Internet protocol service.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-301)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-301)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-301. Duties of the Commission.
    (1) Consistent with the findings and policy established in
paragraph (a) of Section 13-102 and paragraph (a) of Section
13-103, and in order to ensure the attainment of such policies,
the Commission shall:
        (a) participate in all federal programs intended to
    preserve or extend universal telecommunications service,
    unless such programs would place cost burdens on Illinois
    customers of telecommunications services in excess of the
    benefits they would receive through participation,
    provided, however, the Commission shall not approve or
    permit the imposition of any surcharge or other fee
    designed to subsidize or provide a waiver for subscriber
    line charges; and shall report on such programs together
    with an assessment of their adequacy and the advisability
    of participating therein in its annual report to the
    General Assembly, or more often as necessary;
        (b) (Blank) establish a program to monitor the level of
    telecommunications subscriber connection within each
    exchange in Illinois, and shall report the results of such
    monitoring and any actions it has taken or recommends be
    taken to maintain and increase such levels in its annual
    report to the General Assembly, or more often if necessary;
        (c) order all telecommunications carriers offering or
    providing local exchange telecommunications service to
    propose low-cost or budget service tariffs and any other
    rate design or pricing mechanisms designed to facilitate
    customer access to such telecommunications service,
    provided that services offered by any telecommunications
    carrier at the rates, terms, and conditions specified in
    Section 13-506.2 or Section 13-518 of this Article shall
    constitute compliance with this Section. A
    telecommunications carrier may seek Commission approval of
    other low-cost or budget service tariffs or rate design or
    pricing mechanisms to comply with this Section and shall
    after notice and hearing, implement any such proposals
    which it finds likely to achieve such purpose;
        (d) investigate the necessity of and, if appropriate,
    establish a universal service support fund from which local
    exchange telecommunications carriers who pursuant to the
    Twenty-Seventh Interim Order of the Commission in Docket
    No. 83-0142 or the orders of the Commission in Docket No.
    97-0621 and Docket No. 98-0679 received funding and whose
    economic costs of providing services for which universal
    service support may be made available exceed the affordable
    rate established by the Commission for such services may be
    eligible to receive support, less any federal universal
    service support received for the same or similar costs of
    providing the supported services; provided, however, that
    if a universal service support fund is established, the
    Commission shall require that all costs of the fund be
    recovered from all local exchange and interexchange
    telecommunications carriers certificated in Illinois on a
    competitively neutral and nondiscriminatory basis. In
    establishing any such universal service support fund, the
    Commission shall, in addition to the determination of costs
    for supported services, consider and make findings
    pursuant to subsection (2) paragraphs (1), (2), and (4) of
    item (e) of this Section. Proxy cost, as determined by the
    Commission, may be used for this purpose. In determining
    cost recovery for any universal service support fund, the
    Commission shall not permit recovery of such costs from
    another certificated carrier for any service purchased and
    used solely as an input to a service provided to such
    certificated carrier's retail customers. ; and
    (2) (e) investigate the necessity of and, if appropriate,
establish a universal service support fund in addition to any
fund that may be established pursuant to item (d) of this
Section; provided, however, that if a telecommunications
carrier receives universal service support pursuant to item (d)
of this Section, that telecommunications carrier shall not
receive universal service support pursuant to this item.
Recipients of any universal service support funding created by
this item shall be "eligible" telecommunications carriers, as
designated by the Commission in accordance with 47 U.S.C.
214(e)(2). Eligible telecommunications carriers providing
local exchange telecommunications service may be eligible to
receive support for such services, less any federal universal
service support received for the same or similar costs of
providing the supported services. If a fund is established, the
Commission shall require that the costs of such fund be
recovered from all telecommunications carriers, with the
exception of wireless carriers who are providers of two-way
cellular telecommunications service and who have not been
designated as eligible telecommunications carriers, on a
competitively neutral and non-discriminatory basis. In any
order creating a fund pursuant to paragraph (d) of subsection
(1) this item, the Commission, after notice and hearing, shall:
        (a) (1) Define the group of services to be declared
    "supported telecommunications services" that constitute
    "universal service". This group of services shall, at a
    minimum, include those services as defined by the Federal
    Communications Commission and as from time to time amended.
    In addition, the Commission shall consider the range of
    services currently offered by telecommunications carriers
    offering local exchange telecommunications service, the
    existing rate structures for the supported
    telecommunications services, and the telecommunications
    needs of Illinois consumers in determining the supported
    telecommunications services. The Commission shall, from
    time to time or upon request, review and, if appropriate,
    revise the group of Illinois supported telecommunications
    services and the terms of the fund to reflect changes or
    enhancements in telecommunications needs, technologies,
    and available services.
        (b) (2) Identify all implicit subsidies contained in
    rates or charges of incumbent local exchange carriers,
    including all subsidies in interexchange access charges,
    and determine how such subsidies can be made explicit by
    the creation of the fund.
        (3) Identify the incumbent local exchange carriers'
    economic costs of providing the supported
    telecommunications services.
        (c) (4) Establish an affordable price for the supported
    telecommunications services for the respective incumbent
    local exchange carrier. The affordable price shall be no
    less than the rates in effect at the time the Commission
    creates a fund pursuant to this item. The Commission may
    establish and utilize indices or models for updating the
    affordable price for supported telecommunications
    services.
        (5) Identify the telecommunications carriers from whom
    the costs of the fund shall be recovered and the mechanism
    to be used to determine and establish a competitively
    neutral and non-discriminatory funding basis. From time to
    time, or upon request, the Commission shall consider
    whether, based upon changes in technology or other factors,
    additional telecommunications providers should contribute
    to the fund. The Commission shall establish the basis upon
    which telecommunications carriers contributing to the fund
    shall recover contributions on a competitively neutral and
    non-discriminatory basis. In determining cost recovery for
    any universal support fund, the Commission shall not permit
    recovery of such costs from another certificated carrier
    for any service purchased and used solely as an input to a
    service provided to such certificated carriers' retail
    customers.
        (6) Approve a plan for the administration and operation
    of the fund by a neutral third party consistent with the
    requirements of this item.
    No fund shall be created pursuant to this item until
existing implicit subsidies, including, but not limited to,
those subsidies contained in interexchange access charges,
have been identified and eliminated through revisions to rates
or charges. Prior to May 1, 2000, such revisions to rates or
charges to eliminate implicit subsidies shall occur
contemporaneously with any funding established pursuant to
this item. However, if the Commission does not establish a
universal service support fund by May 1, 2000, the Commission
shall not be prevented from entering an order or taking other
actions to reduce or eliminate existing subsidies as well as
considering the effect of such reduction or elimination on
local exchange carriers.
    Any telecommunications carrier providing local exchange
telecommunications service which offers to its local exchange
customers a choice of two or more local exchange
telecommunications service offerings shall provide, to any
such customer requesting it, once a year without charge, a
report describing which local exchange telecommunications
service offering would result in the lowest bill for such
customer's local exchange service, based on such customer's
calling pattern and usage for the previous 6 months. At least
once a year, each such carrier shall provide a notice to each
of its local exchange telecommunications service customers
describing the availability of this report and the specific
procedures by which customers may receive it. Such report shall
only be available to current and future customers who have
received at least 6 months of continuous local exchange service
from such carrier.
(Source: P.A. 91-636, eff. 8-20-99.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-401.1 new)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-401.1. Interconnected voice over Internet protocol
(VoIP) service provider registration.
    (a) An Interconnected VoIP provider providing fixed or
non-nomadic service in Illinois on December 1, 2010 shall
register with the Commission no later than January 1, 2011. All
other Interconnected VoIP providers providing fixed or
non-nomadic service in Illinois shall register with the
Commission at least 30 days before providing service in
Illinois. The Commission shall prescribe a registration form no
later than October 1, 2010. The registration form prescribed by
the Commission shall only require the following information:
        (1) the provider's legal name and any name under which
    the provider does or will do business in Illinois, as
    authorized by the Secretary of State;
        (2) the provider's address and telephone number, along
    with contact information for the person responsible for
    ongoing communications with the Commission;
        (3) a description of the provider's dispute resolution
    process and, if any, the telephone number to initiate the
    dispute resolution process; and
        (4) a description of each exchange of a local exchange
    company, in whole or in part, or the cities, towns, or
    geographic areas, in whole or in part, in which the
    provider is offering or proposes to offer Interconnected
    VoIP service.
    A provider must notify the Commission of any change in the
information identified in paragraphs (1), (2), (3), or (4) of
this subsection (a) within 5 business days after any such
change.
    (b) A provider shall charge and collect from its end-user
customers, and remit to the appropriate authority, fees and
surcharges in the same manner as are charged and collected upon
end-user customers of local exchange telecommunications
service and remitted by local exchange telecommunications
companies for local enhanced 9-1-1 surcharges.
    (c) A provider may designate information that it submits in
its registration form or subsequent reports as confidential or
proprietary, provided that the provider states the reasons the
confidential designation is necessary. The Commission shall
provide adequate protection for such information pursuant to
Section 4-404 of this Act. If the Commission or any other party
seeks public disclosure of information designated as
confidential, the Commission shall consider the confidential
designation in a proceeding under the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act, and the burden of proof to demonstrate that the
designated information is confidential shall be upon the
provider. 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. 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.
    (d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the
contrary, the Commission shall have the authority, after notice
and hearing, to revoke or suspend the registration of any
provider that fails to comply with the requirements of this
Section.
    (e) The provisions of this Section are severable under
Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-406)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-406)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-406. Abandonment of service. No telecommunications
carrier offering or providing noncompetitive
telecommunications service pursuant to a valid Certificate of
Service Authority or certificate of public convenience and
necessity shall discontinue or abandon such service once
initiated until and unless it shall demonstrate, and the
Commission finds, after notice and hearing, that such
discontinuance or abandonment will not deprive customers of any
necessary or essential telecommunications service or access
thereto and is not otherwise contrary to the public interest.
No telecommunications carrier offering or providing
competitive telecommunications service shall completely
discontinue or abandon such service to an identifiable class or
group of customers once initiated except upon 60 30 days notice
to the Commission and affected customers. The Commission may,
upon its own motion or upon complaint, investigate the proposed
discontinuance or abandonment of a competitive
telecommunications service and may, after notice and hearing,
prohibit such proposed discontinuance or abandonment if the
Commission finds that it would be contrary to the public
interest. If the Commission does not provide notice of a
hearing within 60 calendar days after the notification or holds
a hearing and fails to find that the proposed discontinuation
or abandonment would be contrary to the public interest, the
provider may discontinue or abandon such service after
providing at least 30 days notice to affected customers.
(Source: P.A. 84-1063.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-407)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-407)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-407. Commission study and report. The Commission
shall monitor and analyze patterns of entry and exit and
changes in patterns of entry and exit for each relevant market
for telecommunications services, including emerging high speed
telecommunications markets and broadband services. The
Commission , and shall include its findings together with
appropriate recommendations for legislative action in its
annual report to the General Assembly. The Commission shall
provide an analysis of entry and exit, along with changes in
patterns of entry and exit, for broadband services in its
annual report to the General Assembly.
    In preparing its annual report, the Commission may obtain
any information on broadband services that has been collected
or is in the possession of the Department of Commerce and
Economic Opportunity pursuant to the High Speed Internet
Services and Information Technology Act. The Commission shall
coordinate with the Department of Commerce and Economic
Opportunity in collecting information to avoid a duplication of
efforts.
    The Commission shall also monitor and analyze the status of
deployment of services to consumers, and any resulting "digital
divisions" between consumers, including any changes or trends
therein. The Commission shall include its findings together
with appropriate recommendations for legislative action in its
annual report to the General Assembly. In preparing this
analysis the Commission shall evaluate information provided by
certificated telecommunications carriers, registered
Interconnected VoIP providers, and Facilities-based Providers
of Broadband Connections to End User Locations that pertains to
the state of competition in telecommunications markets
including, but not limited to:
        (1) the number and type of firms providing
    telecommunications services and , including broadband
    telecommunications services, within the State;
        (2) the telecommunications services offered by these
    firms to both retail and wholesale customers;
        (3) the extent to which customers and other providers
    are purchasing the firms' telecommunications services; and
        (4) the technologies or methods by which these firms
    provide these services, including descriptions of
    technologies in place and under development, and the degree
    to which firms rely on other wholesale providers to provide
    service to their own customers. ; and
        (5) the tariffed retail and wholesale prices for
    services provided by these firms.
    The Commission shall at a minimum assess the variability in
this information according to geography, examining variability
by exchange, wirecenter, or zip code, and by customer class,
examining, at a minimum, the variability between residential
and small, medium, and large business customers. The Commission
shall provide an analysis of market trends by collecting this
information from certificated telecommunications carriers,
registered Interconnected VoIP providers, and Facilities-based
Providers of Broadband Connections to End User Locations firms
providing telecommunications services within the State. The
Commission shall also collect all information, in a format
determined by the Commission, that the Commission deems
necessary to assist in monitoring and analyzing the
telecommunications markets and broadband market, along with
and the status of competition and deployment of
telecommunications services and broadband services to
consumers in the State.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act,
certificated telecommunications carriers and registered
Interconnected VoIP providers shall report to the Commission
such information, with the exception of broadband information,
requested by the Commission necessary to satisfy the reporting
requirements of items (1) through (4) of this Section. The
Commission may coordinate and work with the Department of
Commerce and Economic Opportunity to avoid duplication of
collection of information that is collected pursuant to the
High Speed Internet Services and Information Technology Act.
    For the purposes of this Section:
        "Broadband connections" include wired lines or
    wireless channels that enable the end user to receive
    information from or send information to the Internet at
    information transfer rates exceeding 200 kbps in at least
    one direction.
        "End user" includes a residential, business,
    institutional, or government entity who uses broadband
    services for its own purposes and who does not resell such
    services to other entities or incorporate such services
    into retail Internet-access services. For purposes of this
    Section, an Internet Service Provider (ISP) is not an end
    user of a broadband connection.
        "Facilities-based Provider of Broadband Connections to
    End User Locations" means an entity that meets any of the
    following conditions:
            (i) It owns the portion of the physical facility
        that terminates at the end user location.
            (ii) It obtains unbundled network elements (UNEs),
        special access lines, or other leased facilities that
        terminate at the end user location and provisions or
        equips them as broadband.
            (iii) It provisions or equips a broadband wireless
        channel to the end user location over licensed or
        unlicensed spectrum.
        "Facilities-based Provider of Broadband Connections to
    End User Locations" does not include providers of
    terrestrial fixed wireless services (such as Wi-Fi and
    other wireless Ethernet, or wireless local area network,
    applications) that only enable local distribution and
    sharing of a premises broadband facility and does not
    include air-to-ground services.
(Source: P.A. 92-22, eff. 6-30-01.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-503)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-503)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-503. Information available to the public. With
respect to rates or other charges made, demanded or received
for any telecommunications service offered, provided or to be
provided, whether such service is competitive or
noncompetitive, telecommunications carriers shall comply with
the publication and filing provisions of Sections 9-101, 9-102,
and 9-103. Telecommunications carriers shall make all tariffs
available electronically to the public without requiring a
password or other means of registration. A telecommunications
carrier's website shall, if applicable, provide in a
conspicuous manner information on the rates, charges, terms,
and conditions of service available and a toll-free telephone
number that may be used to contact an agent for assistance with
obtaining rate or other charge information or the terms and
conditions of service.
(Source: P.A. 84-1063.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-505)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-505)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-505. Rate changes; competitive services. (a) Any
proposed increase or decrease in rates or charges, or proposed
change in any classification or tariff resulting in an increase
or decrease in rates or charges, for a competitive
telecommunications service shall be permitted upon the filing
of the proposed rate, charge, classification, or tariff. Notice
Prior notice of an increase shall be given, no later than the
prior billing cycle, to all potentially affected customers by
mail, publication in a newspaper of general circulation, or
equivalent means of notice, including electronic if the
customer has elected electronic billing.
    (b) If a hearing is held pursuant to Section 9-250
regarding the reasonableness of an increase in the rates or
charges of a competitive local exchange service, then the
telecommunications carrier providing the service shall have
the burden of proof to establish the justness and
reasonableness of the proposed rate or charge.
(Source: P.A. 90-185, eff. 7-23-97.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-506.2 new)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-506.2. Market regulation for competitive retail
services.
    (a) Definitions. As used in this Section:
        (1) "Electing Provider" means a telecommunications
    carrier that is subject to either rate regulation pursuant
    to Section 13-504 or Section 13-505 or alternative
    regulation pursuant to Section 13-506.1 and that elects to
    have the rates, terms, and conditions of its competitive
    retail telecommunications services solely determined and
    regulated pursuant to the terms of this Article.
        (2) "Basic local exchange service" means either a
    stand-alone residence network access line and per-call
    usage or, for any geographic area in which such stand-alone
    service is not offered, a stand-alone flat rate residence
    network access line for which local calls are not charged
    for frequency or duration. Extended Area Service shall be
    included in basic local exchange service.
    (b) Election for market regulation. Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Act, an Electing Provider may elect to
have the rates, terms, and conditions of its competitive retail
telecommunications services solely determined and regulated
pursuant to the terms of this Section by filing written notice
of its election for market regulation with the Commission. The
notice of election shall designate the geographic area of the
Electing Provider's service territory where the market
regulation shall apply, either on a state-wide basis or in one
or more specified Market Service Areas ("MSA") or Exchange
areas. An Electing Provider shall not make an election for
market regulation under this Section unless it commits in its
written notice of election for market regulation to fulfill the
conditions and requirements in this Section in each geographic
area in which market regulation is elected. Immediately upon
filing the notice of election for market regulation, the
Electing Provider shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the
Commission to the extent expressly provided in this Section.
    (c) Competitive classification. Market regulation shall
only be available for competitive retail telecommunications
services as provided in this subsection.
        (1) For geographic areas in which telecommunications
    services provided by the Electing Provider were classified
    as competitive either through legislative action or a
    tariff filing pursuant to Section 13-502 prior to January
    1, 2010, and that are included in the Electing Provider's
    notice of election pursuant to subsection (b) of this
    Section, such services, and all recurring and nonrecurring
    charges associated with, related to or used in connection
    with such services, shall be classified as competitive
    without further Commission review. For services classified
    as competitive pursuant to this subsection, the
    requirements or conditions in any order or decision
    rendered by the Commission pursuant to Section 13-502 prior
    to the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th
    General Assembly, except for the commitments made by the
    Electing Provider in such order or decision concerning the
    optional packages required in subsection (d) of this
    Section and basic local exchange service as defined in this
    Section, shall no longer be in effect and no Commission
    investigation, review, or proceeding under Section 13-502
    shall be continued, conducted, or maintained with respect
    to such services, charges, requirements, or conditions.
        (2) For those geographic areas in which residential
    local exchange telecommunications services have not been
    classified as competitive as of the effective date of this
    amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, all
    telecommunications services provided to residential and
    business end users by an Electing Provider in the
    geographic area that is included in its notice of election
    pursuant to subsection (b) shall be classified as
    competitive for purposes of this Article without further
    Commission review.
        (3) If an Electing Provider was previously subject to
    alternative regulation pursuant to Section 13-506.1 of
    this Article, the alternative regulation plan shall
    terminate in whole for all services subject to that plan
    and be of no force or effect, without further Commission
    review or action, when the Electing Provider's residential
    local exchange telecommunications service in each MSA in
    its telecommunications service area in the State has been
    classified as competitive pursuant to either subdivision
    (c)(1) or (c)(2) of this Section.
        (4) The service packages described in Section 13-518
    shall be classified as competitive for purposes of this
    Section if offered by an Electing Provider in a geographic
    area in which local exchange telecommunications service
    has been classified as competitive pursuant to either
    subdivision (c)(1) or (c)(2) of this Section.
    (d) Consumer choice safe harbor options.
        (1) An Electing Provider in each of the MSA or Exchange
    areas classified as competitive pursuant to subdivision
    (c)(1) or (c)(2) of this Section shall offer to all
    residential customers who choose to subscribe the
    following optional packages of services priced at the same
    rate levels in effect on January 1, 2010:
            (A) A basic package, which shall consist of a
        stand-alone residential network access line and 30
        local calls. If the Electing Provider offers a
        stand-alone residential access line and local usage on
        a per call basis, the price for the basic package shall
        be the Electing Provider's applicable price in effect
        on January 1, 2010 for the sum of a residential access
        line and 30 local calls, additional calls over 30 calls
        shall be provided at the current per call rate.
        However, this basic package is not required if
        stand-alone residential network access lines or
        per-call local usage are not offered by the Electing
        Provider in the geographic area on January 1, 2010 or
        if the Electing Provider has not increased its
        stand-alone network access line and local usage rates,
        including Extended Area Service rates, since January
        1, 2010.
            (B) An extra package, which shall consist of
        residential basic local exchange network access line
        and unlimited local calls. The price for the extra
        package shall be the Electing Provider's applicable
        price in effect on January 1, 2010 for a residential
        access line with unlimited local calls.
            (C) A plus package, which shall consist of
        residential basic local exchange network access line,
        unlimited local calls, and the customer's choice of 2
        vertical services offered by the Electing Provider.
        The term "vertical services" as used in this
        subsection, includes, but is not limited to, call
        waiting, call forwarding, 3-way calling, caller ID,
        call tracing, automatic callback, repeat dialing, and
        voicemail. The price for the plus package shall be the
        Electing Provider's applicable price in effect on
        January 1, 2010 for the sum of a residential access
        line with unlimited local calls and 2 times the average
        price for the vertical features included in the
        package.
        (2) For those geographic areas in which local exchange
    telecommunications services were classified as competitive
    on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th
    General Assembly, an Electing Provider in each such MSA or
    Exchange area shall be subject to the same terms and
    conditions as provided in commitments made by the Electing
    Provider in connection with such previous competitive
    classifications, which shall apply with equal force under
    this Section, except as follows: (i) the limits on price
    increases on the optional packages required by this Section
    shall be extended consistent with subsection (d)(1) of this
    Section and (ii) the price for the extra package required
    by subsection (d)(1)(B) shall be reduced by one dollar from
    the price in effect on January 1, 2010. In addition, if an
    Electing Provider obtains a competitive classification
    pursuant to subsection (c)(1) and (c)(2), the price for the
    optional packages shall be determined in such area in
    compliance with subsection (d)(1), except the price for the
    plus package required by subsection (d)(1) (C) shall be the
    lower of the price for such area or the price of the plus
    package in effect on January 1, 2010 for areas classified
    as competitive pursuant to subsection (c)(1).
        (3) To the extent that the requirements in Section
    13-518 applied to a telecommunications carrier prior to the
    effective date of this Section and that telecommunications
    carrier becomes an Electing Provider in accordance with the
    provisions of this Section, the requirements in Section
    13-518 shall cease to apply to that Electing Provider in
    those geographic areas included in the Electing Provider's
    notice of election pursuant to subsection (b) of this
    Section.
        (4) An Electing Provider shall make the optional
    packages required by this subsection and stand-alone
    residential network access lines and local usage, where
    offered, readily available to the public by providing
    information, in a clear manner, to residential customers.
    Information shall be made available on a website, and an
    Electing Provider shall provide notification to its
    customers every 6 months, provided that notification may
    consist of a bill page message that provides an objective
    description of the safe harbor options that includes a
    telephone number and website address where the customer may
    obtain additional information about the packages from the
    Electing Provider. The optional packages shall be offered
    on a monthly basis with no term of service requirement. An
    Electing Provider shall allow online electronic ordering
    of the optional packages and stand-alone residential
    network access lines and local usage, where offered, on its
    website in a manner similar to the online electronic
    ordering of its other residential services.
        (5) An Electing Provider shall comply with the
    Commission's existing rules, regulations, and notices in
    Title 83, Part 735 of the Illinois Administrative Code when
    offering or providing the optional packages required by
    this subsection (d) and stand-alone residential network
    access lines.
        (6) An Electing Provider shall provide to the
    Commission semi-annual subscribership reports as of June
    30 and December 31 that contain the number of its customers
    subscribing to each of the consumer choice safe harbor
    packages required by subsection (d)(1) of this Section and
    the number of its customers subscribing to retail
    residential basic local exchange service as defined in
    subsection (a)(2) of this Section. The first semi-annual
    reports shall be made on April 1, 2011 for December 31,
    2010, and on September 1, 2011 for June 30, 2011, and
    semi-annually on April 1 and September 1 thereafter. Such
    subscribership information shall be accorded confidential
    and proprietary treatment upon request by the Electing
    Provider.
        (7) The Commission shall have the power, after notice
    and hearing as provided in this Article, upon complaint or
    upon its own motion, to take corrective action if the
    requirements of this Section are not complied with by an
    Electing Provider.
    (e) Service quality and customer credits for basic local
exchange service.
        (1) An Electing Provider shall meet the following
    service quality standards in providing basic local
    exchange service, which for purposes of this subsection
    (e), includes both basic local exchange service and the
    consumer choice safe harbor options required by subsection
    (d) of this Section.
            (A) Install basic local exchange service within 5
        business days after receipt of an order from the
        customer unless the customer requests an installation
        date that is beyond 5 business days after placing the
        order for basic service and to inform the customer of
        the Electing Provider's duty to install service within
        this timeframe. If installation of service is
        requested on or by a date more than 5 business days in
        the future, the Electing Provider shall install
        service by the date requested.
            (B) Restore basic local exchange service for the
        customer within 30 hours after receiving notice that
        the customer is out of service.
            (C) Keep all repair and installation appointments
        for basic local exchange service if a customer premises
        visit requires a customer to be present. The
        appointment window shall be either a specific time or,
        at a maximum, a 4-hour time block during evening,
        weekend, and normal business hours.
            (D) Inform a customer when a repair or installation
        appointment requires the customer to be present.
        (2) Customers shall be credited by the Electing
    Provider for violations of basic local exchange service
    quality standards described in subdivision (e)(1) of this
    Section. The credits shall be applied automatically on the
    statement issued to the customer for the next monthly
    billing cycle following the violation or following the
    discovery of the violation. The next monthly billing cycle
    following the violation or the discovery of the violation
    means the billing cycle immediately following the billing
    cycle in process at the time of the violation or discovery
    of the violation, provided the total time between the
    violation or discovery of the violation and the issuance of
    the credit shall not exceed 60 calendar days. The Electing
    Provider is responsible for providing the credits and the
    customer is under no obligation to request such credits.
    The following credits shall apply:
            (A) If an Electing Provider fails to repair an
        out-of-service condition for basic local exchange
        service within 30 hours, the Electing Provider shall
        provide a credit to the customer. If the service
        disruption is for more than 30 hours, but not more than
        48 hours, the credit must be equal to a pro-rata
        portion of the monthly recurring charges for all basic
        local exchange services disrupted. If the service
        disruption is for more than 48 hours, but not more than
        72 hours, the credit must be equal to at least 33% of
        one month's recurring charges for all local services
        disrupted. If the service disruption is for more than
        72 hours, but not more than 96 hours, the credit must
        be equal to at least 67% of one month's recurring
        charges for all basic local exchange services
        disrupted. If the service disruption is for more than
        96 hours, but not more than 120 hours, the credit must
        be equal to one month's recurring charges for all basic
        local exchange services disrupted. For each day or
        portion thereof that the service disruption continues
        beyond the initial 120-hour period, the Electing
        Provider shall also provide an additional credit of $20
        per calendar day.
            (B) If an Electing Provider fails to install basic
        local exchange service as required under subdivision
        (e)(1) of this Section, the Electing Provider shall
        waive 50% of any installation charges, or in the
        absence of an installation charge or where
        installation is pursuant to the Link Up program, the
        Electing Provider shall provide a credit of $25. If an
        Electing Provider fails to install service within 10
        business days after the service application is placed,
        or fails to install service within 5 business days
        after the customer's requested installation date, if
        the requested date was more than 5 business days after
        the date of the order, the Electing Provider shall
        waive 100% of the installation charge, or in the
        absence of an installation charge or where
        installation is provided pursuant to the Link Up
        program, the Electing Provider shall provide a credit
        of $50. For each day that the failure to install
        service continues beyond the initial 10 business days,
        or beyond 5 business days after the customer's
        requested installation date, if the requested date was
        more than 5 business days after the date of the order,
        the Electing Provider shall also provide an additional
        credit of $20 per calendar day until the basic local
        exchange service is installed.
            (C) If an Electing Provider fails to keep a
        scheduled repair or installation appointment when a
        customer premises visit requires a customer to be
        present as required under subdivision (e)(1) of this
        Section, the Electing Provider shall credit the
        customer $25 per missed appointment. A credit required
        by this subdivision does not apply when the Electing
        Provider provides the customer notice of its inability
        to keep the appointment no later than 8:00 pm of the
        day prior to the scheduled date of the appointment.
            (D) Credits required by this subsection do not
        apply if the violation of a service quality standard:
                (i) occurs as a result of a negligent or
            willful act on the part of the customer;
                (ii) occurs as a result of a malfunction of
            customer-owned telephone equipment or inside
            wiring;
                (iii) occurs as a result of, or is extended by,
            an emergency situation as defined in 83 Ill. Adm.
            Code 732.10;
                (iv) is extended by the Electing Provider's
            inability to gain access to the customer's
            premises due to the customer missing an
            appointment, provided that the violation is not
            further extended by the Electing Provider;
                (v) occurs as a result of a customer request to
            change the scheduled appointment, provided that
            the violation is not further extended by the
            Electing Provider;
                (vi) occurs as a result of an Electing
            Provider's right to refuse service to a customer as
            provided in Commission rules; or
                (vii) occurs as a result of a lack of
            facilities where a customer requests service at a
            geographically remote location, where a customer
            requests service in a geographic area where the
            Electing Provider is not currently offering
            service, or where there are insufficient
            facilities to meet the customer's request for
            service, subject to an Electing Provider's
            obligation for reasonable facilities planning.
        (3) Each Electing Provider shall provide to the
    Commission on a quarterly basis and in a form suitable for
    posting on the Commission's website in conformance with the
    rules adopted by the Commission and in effect on April 1,
    2010, a public report that includes the following data for
    basic local exchange service quality of service:
            (A) With regard to credits due in accordance with
        subdivision (e)(2)(A) as a result of out-of-service
        conditions lasting more than 30 hours:
                (i) the total dollar amount of any customer
            credits paid;
                (ii) the number of credits issued for repairs
            between 30 and 48 hours;
                (iii) the number of credits issued for repairs
            between 49 and 72 hours;
                (iv) the number of credits issued for repairs
            between 73 and 96 hours;
                (v) the number of credits used for repairs
            between 97 and 120 hours;
                (vi) the number of credits issued for repairs
            greater than 120 hours; and
                (vii) the number of exemptions claimed for
            each of the categories identified in subdivision
            (e)(2)(D).
            (B) With regard to credits due in accordance with
        subdivision (e)(2)(B) as a result of failure to install
        basic local exchange service:
                (i) the total dollar amount of any customer
            credits paid;
                (ii) the number of installations after 5
            business days;
                (iii) the number of installations after 10
            business days;
                (iv) the number of installations after 11
            business days; and
                (v) the number of exemptions claimed for each
            of the categories identified in subdivision
            (e)(2)(D).
            (C) With regard to credits due in accordance with
        subdivision (e)(2)(C) as a result of missed
        appointments:
                (i) the total dollar amount of any customer
            credits paid;
                (ii) the number of any customers receiving
            credits; and
                (iii) the number of exemptions claimed for
            each of the categories identified in subdivision
            (e)(2)(D).
            (D) The Electing Provider's annual report required
        by this subsection shall also include, for
        informational reporting, the performance data
        described in subdivisions (e)(2)(A), (e)(2)(B), and
        (e)(2)(C), and trouble reports per 100 access lines
        calculated using the Commission's existing applicable
        rules and regulations for such measures, including the
        requirements for service standards established in this
        Section.
        (4) It is the intent of the General Assembly that the
    service quality rules and customer credits in this
    subsection (e) of this Section and other enforcement
    mechanisms, including fines and penalties authorized by
    Section 13-305, shall apply on a nondiscriminatory basis to
    all Electing Providers. Accordingly, notwithstanding any
    provision of any service quality rules promulgated by the
    Commission, any alternative regulation plan adopted by the
    Commission, or any other order of the Commission, any
    Electing Provider that is subject to any other order of the
    Commission and that violates or fails to comply with the
    service quality standards promulgated pursuant to this
    subsection (e) or any other order of the Commission shall
    not be subject to any fines, penalties, customer credits,
    or enforcement mechanisms other than such fines or
    penalties or customer credits as may be imposed by the
    Commission in accordance with the provisions of this
    subsection (e) and Section 13-305, which are to be
    generally applicable to all Electing Providers. The amount
    of any fines or penalties imposed by the Commission for
    failure to comply with the requirements of this subsection
    (e) shall be an appropriate amount, taking into account, at
    a minimum, the Electing Provider's gross annual intrastate
    revenue; the frequency, duration, and recurrence of the
    violation; and the relative harm caused to the affected
    customers or other users of the network. In imposing fines
    and penalties, the Commission shall take into account
    compensation or credits paid by the Electing Provider to
    its customers pursuant to this subsection (e) in
    compensation for any violation found pursuant to this
    subsection (e), and in any event the fine or penalty shall
    not exceed an amount equal to the maximum amount of a civil
    penalty that may be imposed under Section 13-305.
    (f) Commission jurisdiction upon election for market
regulation. Except as otherwise expressly stated in this
Section, the Commission shall thereafter have no jurisdiction
or authority over any aspect of competitive retail
telecommunications service of an Electing Provider in those
geographic areas included in the Electing Provider's notice of
election pursuant to subsection (b) of this Section, heretofore
subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission, including but
not limited to, any requirements of this Article related to the
terms, conditions, rates, quality of service, availability,
classification or any other aspect of any of the Electing
Provider's competitive retail telecommunications services. No
Electing Provider shall commit any unfair or deceptive act or
practice in connection with any aspect of the offering or
provision of any competitive retail telecommunications
service. Nothing in this Article shall limit or affect any
provisions in the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business
Practices Act with respect to any unfair or deceptive act or
practice by an Electing Provider.
    (g) Commission authority over access services upon
election for market regulation.
        (1) As part of its Notice of Election for Market
    Regulation, the Electing Provider shall reduce its
    intrastate switched access rates to rates no higher than
    its interstate switched access rates in 4 installments. The
    first reduction must be made 30 days after submission of
    its complete application for Notice of Election for Market
    Regulation, and the Electing Provider must reduce its
    intrastate switched access rates by an amount equal to 33%
    of the difference between its current intrastate switched
    access rates and its current interstate switched access
    rates. The second reduction must be made no later than one
    year after the first reduction, and the Electing Provider
    must reduce its then current intrastate switched access
    rates by an amount equal to 41% of the difference between
    its then current intrastate switched access rates and its
    then current interstate switched access rates. The third
    reduction must be made no later than one year after the
    second reduction, and the Electing Provider must reduce its
    then current intrastate switched access rates by an amount
    equal to 50% of the difference between its then current
    intrastate switched access rate and its then current
    interstate switched access rates. The fourth reduction
    must be made on or before June 30, 2013, and the Electing
    Provider must reduce its intrastate switched access rate to
    mirror its then current interstate switched access rates
    and rate structure. Following the fourth reduction, each
    Electing Provider must continue to set its intrastate
    switched access rates to mirror its interstate switched
    access rates and rate structure. For purposes of this
    subsection, the rate for intrastate switched access
    service means the composite, per-minute rate for that
    service, including all applicable fixed and
    traffic-sensitive charges, including, but not limited to,
    carrier common line charges.
        (2) Nothing in paragraph (1) of this subsection (g)
    prohibits an Electing Provider from electing to offer
    intrastate switched access service at rates lower than its
    interstate switched access rates.
        (3) The Commission shall have no authority to order an
    Electing Provider to set its rates for intrastate switched
    access at a level lower than its interstate switched access
    rates.
        (4) The Commission's authority under this subsection
    (g) shall only apply to Electing Providers under Market
    Regulation. The Commission's authority over switched
    access services for all other carriers is retained under
    Section 13-900.2 of this Act.
    (h) Safety of service equipment and facilities.
        (1) An Electing Provider shall furnish, provide, and
    maintain such service instrumentalities, equipment, and
    facilities as shall promote the safety, health, comfort,
    and convenience of its patrons, employees, and public and
    as shall be in all respects adequate, reliable, and
    efficient without discrimination or delay. Every Electing
    Provider shall provide service and facilities that are in
    all respects environmentally safe.
        (2) The Commission is authorized to conduct an
    investigation of any Electing Provider or part thereof. The
    investigation may examine the reasonableness, prudence, or
    efficiency of any aspect of the Electing Provider's
    operations or functions that may affect the adequacy,
    safety, efficiency, or reliability of telecommunications
    service. The Commission may conduct or order an
    investigation only when it has reasonable grounds to
    believe that the investigation is necessary to assure that
    the Electing Provider is providing adequate, efficient,
    reliable, and safe service. The Commission shall, before
    initiating any such investigation, issue an order
    describing the grounds for the investigation and the
    appropriate scope and nature of the investigation, which
    shall be reasonably related to the grounds relied upon by
    the Commission in its order.
    (i) Tariffs. No Electing Provider shall offer or provide
telecommunications service unless and until a tariff is filed
with the Commission that describes the nature of the service,
applicable rates and other charges, terms, and conditions of
service and the exchange, exchanges, or other geographical area
or areas in which the service shall be offered or provided. The
Commission may prescribe the form of such tariff and any
additional data or information that shall be included in the
form. Revenue from retail competitive services received from an
Electing Provider pursuant to such tariffs shall be gross
revenue for purposes of Section 2-202 of this Act.
    (j) Application of Article VII. The provisions of Sections
7-101, 7-102, 7-103, 7-104, 7-204, 7-205, and 7-206 of this Act
are applicable to an Electing Provider offering or providing
retail telecommunications service, and the Commission's
regulation thereof, except that (1) the approval of contracts
and arrangements with affiliated interests required by
paragraph (3) of Section 7-101 shall not apply to such
telecommunications carriers provided that, except as provided
in item (2), those contracts and arrangements shall be filed
with the Commission; (2) affiliated interest contracts or
arrangements entered into by such telecommunications carriers
where the increased obligation thereunder does not exceed the
lesser of $5,000,000 or 5% of such carrier's prior annual
revenue from noncompetitive services are not required to be
filed with the Commission; and (3) any consent and approval of
the Commission required by Section 7-102 is not required for
the sale, lease, assignment, or transfer by any Electing
Provider of any real property that is not necessary or useful
in the performance of its duties to the public.
    (k) Notwithstanding other provisions of this Section, the
Commission retains its existing authority to enforce the
provisions, conditions, and requirements of the following
Sections of this Article: 13-101, 13-103, 13-201, 13-301,
13-301.1, 13-301.2, 13-301.3, 13-303, 13-303.5, 13-304,
13-305, 13-401, 13-401.1, 13-402, 13-403, 13-404, 13-404.1,
13-404.2, 13-405, 13-406, 13-501.5, 13-505, 13-509, 13-510,
13-512, 13-513, 13-514, 13-515, 13-516, 13-519, 13-702,
13-703, 13-704, 13-705, 13-706, 13-707, 13-709, 13-713,
13-801, 13-804, 13-900, 13-900.1, 13-900.2, 13-901, 13-902,
and 13-903, which are fully and equally applicable to Electing
Providers subject to the provisions of this Section. On the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General
Assembly, the following Sections of this Article shall cease to
apply to Electing Providers: 13-302, 13-405.1, 13-501, 13-502,
13-502.5, 13-503, 13-504, 13-505.2, 13-505.3, 13-505.4,
13-505.5, 13-505.6, 13-506.1, 13-507, 13-507.1, 13-508,
13-508.1, 13-517, 13-518, 13-601, 13-701, and 13-712.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-509)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-509)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-509. Agreements for provisions of competitive
telecommunications services differing from tariffs. A
telecommunications carrier may negotiate with customers or
prospective customers to provide competitive
telecommunications service, and in so doing, may offer or agree
to provide such service on such terms and for such rates or
charges as are reasonable, without regard to any tariffs it may
have filed with the Commission with respect to such services.
Upon request of the Commission Within 30 days after executing
any such agreement, the telecommunications carrier shall
submit to the Commission written notice of a list of any such
agreements (which list may be filed electronically) within the
past year. The notice shall identify the general nature of all
such agreements, the parties to each agreement, and a general
description of differences between each agreement and the
related tariff. A copy of each such agreement and any cost
support required to be filed with the agreement by some other
Section of this Act shall be provided to the Commission within
10 business days after a request for review of the agreement is
made by the Commission or is made to the Commission by another
telecommunications carrier or by a party to such agreement.
Upon submitting notice to the Commission of any such agreement,
the telecommunications carrier shall thereafter provide
service according to the terms thereof, unless the Commission
finds, after notice and hearing, that the continued provision
of service pursuant to such agreement would substantially and
adversely affect the financial integrity of the
telecommunications carrier or would violate any other
provision of this Act.
    Any agreement or notice entered into or submitted pursuant
to the provisions of this Section may, in the Commission's
discretion, be accorded proprietary treatment.
(Source: P.A. 92-22, eff. 6-30-01; 93-245, eff. 7-22-03.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-703)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-703)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-703. (a) The Commission shall design and implement
a program whereby each telecommunications carrier providing
local exchange service shall provide a telecommunications
device capable of servicing the needs of those persons with a
hearing or speech disability together with a single party line,
at no charge additional to the basic exchange rate, to any
subscriber who is certified as having a hearing or speech
disability by a licensed physician, speech-language
pathologist, audiologist or a qualified State agency and to any
subscriber which is an organization serving the needs of those
persons with a hearing or speech disability as determined and
specified by the Commission pursuant to subsection (d).
    (b) The Commission shall design and implement a program,
whereby each telecommunications carrier providing local
exchange service shall provide a telecommunications relay
system, using third party intervention to connect those persons
having a hearing or speech disability with persons of normal
hearing by way of intercommunications devices and the telephone
system, making available reasonable access to all phases of
public telephone service to persons who have a hearing or
speech disability. In order to design a telecommunications
relay system which will meet the requirements of those persons
with a hearing or speech disability available at a reasonable
cost, the Commission shall initiate an investigation and
conduct public hearings to determine the most cost-effective
method of providing telecommunications relay service to those
persons who have a hearing or speech disability when using
telecommunications devices and therein solicit the advice,
counsel, and physical assistance of Statewide nonprofit
consumer organizations that serve persons with hearing or
speech disabilities in such hearings and during the development
and implementation of the system. The Commission shall phase in
this program, on a geographical basis, as soon as is
practicable, but no later than June 30, 1990.
    (c) The Commission shall establish a rate recovery
mechanism, authorizing charges in an amount to be determined by
the Commission for each line of a subscriber to allow
telecommunications carriers providing local exchange service
to recover costs as they are incurred under this Section.
    (d) The Commission shall determine and specify those
organizations serving the needs of those persons having a
hearing or speech disability that shall receive a
telecommunications device and in which offices the equipment
shall be installed in the case of an organization having more
than one office. For the purposes of this Section,
"organizations serving the needs of those persons with hearing
or speech disabilities" means centers for independent living as
described in Section 12a of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation
Act and not-for-profit organizations whose primary purpose is
serving the needs of those persons with hearing or speech
disabilities. The Commission shall direct the
telecommunications carriers subject to its jurisdiction and
this Section to comply with its determinations and
specifications in this regard.
    (e) As used in this Section, the phrase "telecommunications
carrier providing local exchange service" includes, without
otherwise limiting the meaning of the term, telecommunications
carriers which are purely mutual concerns, having no rates or
charges for services, but paying the operating expenses by
assessment upon the members of such a company and no other
person.
    (f) Interconnected VoIP service providers in Illinois
shall collect and remit assessments determined in accordance
with this Section in a competitively neutral manner in the same
manner as a telecommunications carrier providing local
exchange service. Interconnected VoIP services shall not be
considered an intrastate telecommunications service for the
purposes of this Section in a manner inconsistent with federal
law or Federal Communications Commission regulation.
    (g) The provisions of this Section are severable under
Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
(Source: P.A. 88-497.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-704)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-704)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-704. Each page of a billing statement which sets
forth charges assessed against a customer by a
telecommunications carrier for telecommunications service
shall reflect the telephone number or customer account number
to which the charges are being billed. If a telecommunications
carrier offers electronic billing, customers may elect to have
their bills sent electronically. Such bills shall be
transmitted with instructions for payment. Information sent
electronically shall be deemed to satisfy any requirement in
this Section that such information be printed or written on a
customer bill. Bills may be paid electronically or by the use
of a customer-preferred financially accredited credit or debit
methodology. The billing statement shall also contain a
separate bill identifying the amount charged as an
infrastructure maintenance fee.
(Source: P.A. 90-154, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-712)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-712. Basic local exchange service quality;
customer credits.
    (a) It is the intent of the General Assembly that every
telecommunications carrier meet minimum service quality
standards in providing basic local exchange service on a
non-discriminatory basis to all classes of customers.
    (b) Definitions:
        (1) (Blank) "Alternative telephone service" means,
    except where technically impracticable, a wireless
    telephone capable of making local calls, and may also
    include, but is not limited to, call forwarding, voice
    mail, or paging services.
        (2) "Basic local exchange service" means residential
    and business lines used for local exchange
    telecommunications service as defined in Section 13-204 of
    this Act, excluding:
            (A) services that employ advanced
        telecommunications capability as defined in Section
        706(c)(1) of the federal Telecommunications Act of
        1996;
            (B) vertical services;
            (C) company official lines; and
            (D) records work only.
        (3) "Link Up" refers to the Link Up Assistance program
    defined and established at 47 C.F.R. Section 54.411 et seq.
    as amended.
    (c) The Commission shall promulgate service quality rules
for basic local exchange service, which may include fines,
penalties, customer credits, and other enforcement mechanisms.
In developing such service quality rules, the Commission shall
consider, at a minimum, the carrier's gross annual intrastate
revenue; the frequency, duration, and recurrence of the
violation; and the relative harm caused to the affected
customer or other users of the network. In imposing fines, the
Commission shall take into account compensation or credits paid
by the telecommunications carrier to its customers pursuant to
this Section in compensation for the violation found pursuant
to this Section. These rules shall become effective within one
year after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
92nd General Assembly.
    (d) The rules shall, at a minimum, require each
telecommunications carrier to do all of the following:
        (1) Install basic local exchange service within 5
    business days after receipt of an order from the customer
    unless the customer requests an installation date that is
    beyond 5 business days after placing the order for basic
    service and to inform the customer of its duty to install
    service within this timeframe. If installation of service
    is requested on or by a date more than 5 business days in
    the future, the telecommunications carrier shall install
    service by the date requested. A telecommunications
    carrier offering basic local exchange service utilizing
    the network or network elements of another carrier shall
    install new lines for basic local exchange service within 3
    business days after provisioning of the line or lines by
    the carrier whose network or network elements are being
    utilized is complete. This subdivision (d)(1) does not
    apply to the migration of a customer between
    telecommunications carriers, so long as the customer
    maintains dial tone.
        (2) Restore basic local exchange service for a customer
    within 30 24 hours of receiving notice that a customer is
    out of service. This provision applies to service
    disruptions that occur when a customer switches existing
    basic local exchange service from one carrier to another.
        (3) Keep all repair and installation appointments for
    basic local exchange service, when a customer premises
    visit requires a customer to be present.
        (4) Inform a customer when a repair or installation
    appointment requires the customer to be present.
    (e) The rules shall include provisions for customers to be
credited by the telecommunications carrier for violations of
basic local exchange service quality standards as described in
subsection (d). 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. The performance levels established in subsection
(c) are solely for the purposes of consumer credits and shall
not be used as performance levels for the purposes of assessing
penalties under Section 13-305. At a minimum, the rules shall
include the following:
        (1) If a carrier fails to repair an out-of-service
    condition for basic local exchange service within 30 24
    hours, the carrier shall provide a credit to the customer.
    If the service disruption is for over 30 hours but less
    than 48 hours or less, the credit must be equal to a
    pro-rata portion of the monthly recurring charges for all
    local services disrupted. If the service disruption is for
    more than 48 hours, but not more than 72 hours, the credit
    must be equal to at least 33% of one month's recurring
    charges for all local services disrupted. If the service
    disruption is for more than 72 hours, but not more than 96
    hours, the credit must be equal to at least 67% of one
    month's recurring charges for all local services
    disrupted. If the service disruption is for more than 96
    hours, but not more than 120 hours, the credit must be
    equal to one month's recurring charges for all local
    services disrupted. For each day or portion thereof that
    the service disruption continues beyond the initial
    120-hour period, the carrier shall also provide either
    alternative telephone service or an additional credit of
    $20 per day, at the customers option.
        (2) If a carrier fails to install basic local exchange
    service as required under subdivision (d)(1), the carrier
    shall waive 50% of any installation charges, or in the
    absence of an installation charge or where installation is
    pursuant to the Link Up program, the carrier shall provide
    a credit of $25. If a carrier fails to install service
    within 10 business days after the service application is
    placed, or fails to install service within 5 business days
    after the customer's requested installation date, if the
    requested date was more than 5 business days after the date
    of the order, the carrier shall waive 100% of the
    installation charge, or in the absence of an installation
    charge or where installation is provided pursuant to the
    Link Up program, the carrier shall provide a credit of $50.
    For each day that the failure to install service continues
    beyond the initial 10 business days, or beyond 5 business
    days after the customer's requested installation date, if
    the requested date was more than 5 business days after the
    date of the order, the carrier shall also provide either
    alternative telephone service or an additional credit of
    $20 per day, at the customer's option until service is
    installed.
        (3) If a carrier fails to keep a scheduled repair or
    installation appointment when a customer premises visit
    requires a customer to be present, the carrier shall credit
    the customer $25 $50 per missed appointment. A credit
    required by this subsection does not apply when the carrier
    provides the customer with 24-hour notice of its inability
    to keep the appointment no later than 8 p.m. of the day
    prior to the scheduled date of the appointment.
        (4) If the violation of a basic local exchange service
    quality standard is caused by a carrier other than the
    carrier providing retail service to the customer, the
    carrier providing retail service to the customer shall
    credit the customer as provided in this Section. The
    carrier causing the violation shall reimburse the carrier
    providing retail service the amount credited the customer.
    When applicable, an interconnection agreement shall govern
    compensation between the carrier causing the violation, in
    whole or in part, and the retail carrier providing the
    credit to the customer.
        (5) (Blank) When alternative telephone service is
    appropriate, the customer may select one of the alternative
    telephone services offered by the carrier. The alternative
    telephone service shall be provided at no cost to the
    customer for the provision of local service.
        (6) Credits required by this subsection do not apply if
    the violation of a service quality standard:
            (i) occurs as a result of a negligent or willful
        act on the part of the customer;
            (ii) occurs as a result of a malfunction of
        customer-owned telephone equipment or inside wiring;
            (iii) occurs as a result of, or is extended by, an
        emergency situation as defined in Commission rules;
            (iv) is extended by the carrier's inability to gain
        access to the customer's premises due to the customer
        missing an appointment, provided that the violation is
        not further extended by the carrier;
            (v) occurs as a result of a customer request to
        change the scheduled appointment, provided that the
        violation is not further extended by the carrier;
            (vi) occurs as a result of a carrier's right to
        refuse service to a customer as provided in Commission
        rules; or
            (vii) occurs as a result of a lack of facilities
        where a customer requests service at a geographically
        remote location, a customer requests service in a
        geographic area where the carrier is not currently
        offering service, or there are insufficient facilities
        to meet the customer's request for service, subject to
        a carrier's obligation for reasonable facilities
        planning.
        (7) The provisions of this subsection are cumulative
    and shall not in any way diminish or replace other civil or
    administrative remedies available to a customer or a class
    of customers.
    (f) The rules shall require each telecommunications
carrier to provide to the Commission, on a quarterly basis and
in a form suitable for posting on the Commission's website, a
public report that includes performance data for basic local
exchange service quality of service. The performance data shall
be disaggregated for each geographic area and each customer
class of the State for which the telecommunications carrier
internally monitored performance data as of a date 120 days
preceding the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 92nd
General Assembly. The report shall include, at a minimum,
performance data on basic local exchange service
installations, lines out of service for more than 30 24 hours,
carrier response to customer calls, trouble reports, and missed
repair and installation commitments.
    (g) The Commission shall establish and implement carrier to
carrier wholesale service quality rules and establish remedies
to ensure enforcement of the rules.
(Source: P.A. 92-22, eff. 6-30-01.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-804 new)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-804. Broadband investment. Increased investment
into broadband infrastructure is critical to the economic
development of this State and a key component to the retention
of existing jobs and the creation of new jobs. The removal of
regulatory uncertainty will attract greater private-sector
investment in broadband infrastructure. Notwithstanding other
provisions of this Article:
        (A) the Commission shall have the authority to certify
    providers of wireless services, including, but not limited
    to, private radio service, public mobile service, or
    commercial mobile service, as those terms are defined in 47
    U.S.C. 332 on the effective date of this amendatory Act of
    the 96th General Assembly or as amended thereafter, to
    provide telecommunications services in Illinois;
        (B) the Commission shall have the authority to certify
    providers of wireless services, including, but not limited
    to, private radio service, public mobile service, or
    commercial mobile service, as those terms are defined in 47
    U.S.C. 332 on the effective date of this amendatory Act of
    the 96th General Assembly or as amended thereafter, as
    eligible telecommunications carriers in Illinois, as that
    term has the meaning prescribed in 47 U.S.C. 214 on the
    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General
    Assembly or as amended thereafter;
        (C) the Commission shall have the authority to register
    providers of fixed or non-nomadic Interconnected VoIP
    service as Interconnected VoIP service providers in
    Illinois in accordance with Section 401.1 of this Article;
        (D) the Commission shall have the authority to require
    providers of Interconnected VoIP service to participate in
    hearing and speech disability programs; and
        (E) the Commission shall have the authority to access
    information provided to the non-profit organization under
    Section 20 of the High Speed Internet Services and
    Information Technology Act, provided the Commission enters
    into a proprietary and confidentiality agreement governing
    such information.
    Except to the extent expressly permitted by and consistent
with federal law, the regulations of the Federal Communications
Commission, this Article, Article XXI or XXII of this Act, or
this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the
Commission shall not regulate the rates, terms, conditions,
quality of service, availability, classification, or any other
aspect of service regarding (i) broadband services, (ii)
Interconnected VoIP services, (iii) information services, as
defined in 47 U.S.C. 153(20) on the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly or as amended
thereafter, or (iv) wireless services, including, but not
limited to, private radio service, public mobile service, or
commercial mobile service, as those terms are defined in 47
U.S.C. 332 on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
96th General Assembly or as amended thereafter.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-900.1 new)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-900.1. Authority over 9-1-1 rates and terms of
service. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article,
the Commission retains its full authority over the rates and
service quality as they apply to 9-1-1 system providers,
including the Commission's existing authority over
interconnection with 9-1-1 system providers and 9-1-1 systems.
The rates, terms, and conditions for 9-1-1 service shall be
tariffed and shall be provided in the manner prescribed by this
Act and shall be subject to the applicable laws, including
rules or regulations adopted and orders issued by the
Commission or the Federal Communications Commission. The
Commission retains this full authority regardless of the
technologies utilized or deployed by 9-1-1 system providers.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-900.2 new)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-900.2. Access services.
    (a) This Section shall apply to switched access rates
charged by all carriers other than Electing Providers whose
switched access rates are governed by subsection (g) of Section
13-506.2 of this Act.
    (b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c) of this
Section, the rates of any telecommunications carrier,
including, but not limited to, competitive local exchange
carriers, providing intrastate switched access service shall
be reduced to rates no higher than the carrier's rates for
interstate switched access service as follows:
        (1) by January 1, 2011, each telecommunications
    carrier must reduce its intrastate switched access rates by
    an amount equal to 50% of the difference between its then
    current intrastate switched access rates and its then
    current interstate switched access rates;
        (2) by January 1, 2012, each telecommunications
    carrier must further reduce its intrastate switched access
    rates by an amount equal to 50% of the difference between
    its then current intrastate switched access rates and its
    then current interstate switched access rates;
        (3) by July 1, 2012, each telecommunications carrier
    must reduce its intrastate switched access rates to mirror
    its then current interstate switched access rates and rate
    structure.
    Following 24 months after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, each
telecommunications carrier must continue to set its intrastate
switched access rates to mirror its interstate switched access
rates and rate structure. For purposes of this Section, the
rate for intrastate switched access service means the
composite, per-minute rate for that service, including all
applicable fixed and traffic-sensitive charges, including, but
not limited to, carrier common line charges.
    (c) Subsection (b) of this Section shall not apply to
incumbent local exchange carriers serving 35,000 or fewer
access lines.
    (d) Nothing in subsection (b) of this Section prohibits a
telecommunications carrier from electing to offer intrastate
switched access service at rates lower than its interstate
rates.
    (e) The Commission shall have no authority to order a
telecommunications carrier to set its rates for intrastate
switched access at a level lower than its interstate switched
access rates.
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-1200)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2010)
    Sec. 13-1200. Repealer. This Article is repealed July 1,
2013 2010.
(Source: P.A. 95-9, eff. 6-30-07; 96-24, eff. 6-30-09.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/22-501)
    Sec. 22-501. 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 that 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
4 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 an 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 its 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 paragraph (1)
    of this subsection (a) 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 paragraph (1) of this subsection (a), 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; a telephone
    number 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, and respond to repair, installation,
    reconnection, disconnection, or other service calls and
    distribute or receive converter boxes, remote control
    units, digital stereo units, or other equipment related to
    the provision of cable or video service; (ii) provide
    customers with bill payment facilities through retail,
    financial, or other commercial institutions located within
    the boundaries of a local unit of government; (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, 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: the name and address of
    customer; the amount of the delinquency; the 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 one 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 (c) 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 or 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 or
    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 is available to customers 24
    hours a day, 7 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 his or her 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) 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 4-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.
        (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 that 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 (f). If the cable
    or video providers are unable to reach an 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 year, the cable or video providers shall make an annual
report to the Commission, to 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, and 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 subdivisions (5) and (6) of subsection (d) and
subdivisions (1) and (2) of subsection (e) 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
this 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 (j) 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 (k), 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 agreement containing an early
termination clause offering residential cable services or
video services or any bundle including such services shall be
for a term longer than 2 years 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 value of any additional goods or services
provided with the cable or video services, 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, or a declining fee based on the remainder of
the contract term.
    (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 that 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 (n) 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 a person who is 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) 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 a 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 June 30, 2007 (the effective date
of Public Act 95-9) 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
that 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 that 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
subdivision (4) of subsection (r) of this Section.
    (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. In no event shall the penalties imposed under
    this subsection (r) exceed $750 for each day of the
    material breach, and these penalties 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 subdivision (2) of this subsection
    (r) in each local unit of government's jurisdiction,
    irrespective of the number of customers affected.
        (4) Any customer, the Attorney General, or a 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) of this Section:
    $25.00 per occurrence.
        (8) Violation of the bundling rules in subsection (h)
    of this Section: $25.00 per month.
    (t) The enforcement powers granted to the Attorney General
in Article XXI of this Act shall apply to this Article, except
that the Attorney General may not seek penalties for violation
of this Article 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 XXI of
this Act or the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices
Act.
    (u) This Article 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 Illinois 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 this Act.
(Source: P.A. 95-9, eff. 6-30-07; 95-876, eff. 8-21-08.)
 
    (220 ILCS 5/13-402.1 rep.)
    (220 ILCS 5/13-408 rep.)
    (220 ILCS 5/13-409 rep.)
    (220 ILCS 5/13-505.1 rep.)
    (220 ILCS 5/13-505.7 rep.)
    (220 ILCS 5/13-506 rep.)
    (220 ILCS 5/13-511 rep.)
    (220 ILCS 5/13-802 rep.)
    Section 15. The Public Utilities Act is amended by
repealing Sections 13-402.1, 13-408, 13-409, 13-505.1,
13-505.7, 13-506, 13-511, and 13-802.
 
    Section 90. Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 96th
General Assembly shall be construed or interpreted to abate,
suspend, alter, or otherwise affect (i) any decision or (ii)
any condition that is rendered by the Illinois Commerce
Commission pursuant to Section 7-204 of the Illinois Public
Utilities Act between April 1, 2010 and July 1, 2010.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.