FCC 95-20 Before the FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of) ) TELEPHONE COMPANY- ) CABLE TELEVISION) CC Docket No. 87-266 Cross-Ownership Rules, ) Sections 63.54-63.58 ) FOURTH FURTHER NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING Adopted: January 12, 1995 Released: January 20, 1995 Comment Date: March 6, 1995 Reply Comment Date: March 27, 1995 By the Commission: Commissioners Barrett, Ness, and Chong issuing separate statements. Table of Contents Paragraph No. I. Introduction 1 II. Background 3 III. Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 9 A. Governing Statutory Provisions 9 1. Application of Title II to LEC Video Programming Offerings 10 2. Application of Title VI to LEC Provision of Video Programming 14 B. Regulatory Safeguards Governing a Local Exchange Carrier's Provision of Video Programming on its Video Dialtone Platform 18 1. Introduction and Scope 18 2. Ownership Affiliation Standards 19 3. Safeguards Against Anticompetitive Conduct 20 a. Sufficient Capacity to Serve Multiple Service Providers 20 b. Non-Ownership Relationships and Activities Between Telephone Companies and Video Programmers 24 c. Acquisition of Cable Facilities 27 d. Joint Marketing and Customer Proprietary Network Information 29 4. Safeguards Against Cross- Subsidization of Video Programming Activities 34 5. Structural Separation 37 6. Pole Attachments 40 7. Legal and Constitutional Issues 42 a. Waiver of the Cross-Ownership Ban 42 b. Constitutionality of Proposed Safeguards 46 IV. Ex Parte Presentations 49 V. Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis 50 VI. Comment Filing Dates 59 VII. Ordering Clauses 60 I. INTRODUCTION 1. In recent years, we have adopted a series of orders to permit telephone companies to play a broader role in the video marketplace. The "video dialtone" framework we established in these orders was designed to be consistent with the cross- ownership restrictions imposed by the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 (1984 Cable Act). The telco-cable cross-ownership ban prohibits telephone companies from providing video programming directly to subscribers in their telephone service areas. 2. The United States Courts of Appeals for the Fourth and Ninth Circuits recently ruled that the 1984 Cable Act's cross- ownership restriction violates the First Amendment rights of telephone companies. United States District Courts in three other circuits have also reached the same conclusion. We issue this Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to consider changes in our video dialtone rules and policies in light of these decisions, and to consider the extent to which Title II and Title VI of the Communications Act apply to telephone companies providing video programming directly to subscribers in their telephone service areas over video dialtone facilities. We intend through this notice to consider rules and policies to govern the provision of video programming over video dialtone facilities by telephone companies not subject to the 1984 Cable Act cross-ownership restriction. To the extent a telephone company remains subject to the ban, our existing video dialtone framework will continue to apply. We also seek comment on certain related issues. II. BACKGROUND 3. The telco-cable cross-ownership restriction has its roots in a Commission rule adopted in 1970. At that time, the cable television industry was in its infancy, and the Commission was concerned that, if permitted to offer cable television services in their telephone service areas, telephone companies would be able to monopolize this emerging industry. In the 1984 Cable Act, Congress enacted a provision modeled after the Commission's cross-ownership restriction. The new statutory ban prohibited telephone companies from providing video programming directly to subscribers in their telephone service areas. "Video programming" was defined as "programming provided by, or generally considered comparable to programming provided by, a television broadcast station." The legislation also included a rural exemption and waiver authority for the Commission. 4. In 1991, the Commission proposed to amend its telco- cable cross-ownership rules to permit local exchange carriers (LECs) to play a broader role in the video marketplace, consistent with the 1984 Cable Act. Specifically, the Commission proposed to permit LECs to provide video dialtone service, which it described as "an enriched version of video common carriage under which LECs will offer various non- programming services in addition to the underlying video transport." The Commission concluded that LECs offering video dialtone service would not need a cable franchise under Section 621(b) of the 1984 Cable Act because (1) video dialtone service is not "cable service" as defined in the 1984 Cable Act and (2) LECs are not "cable operators" as defined in that Act. In addition, the Commission determined that an independent customer- programmer of a LEC's video dialtone platform is not a "cable operator" and consequently, is not subject to the franchise requirement of the 1984 Cable Act. The Commission's video dialtone-franchise decisions have been upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in NCTA v. FCC (1994). 5. In 1992, the Commission adopted the video dialtone proposal outlined in its 1991 Notice. Under video dialtone, LECs may offer, on a nondiscriminatory basis, a basic common carrier video delivery platform capable of accommodating multiple video programmers. This "first level platform" is subject to regulation under Title II of the Communications Act. LECs may also offer enhanced and other non-regulated services provided they comply with existing regulatory safeguards. LECs proposing to construct video dialtone facilities must first obtain approval under Section 214 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended (the Act). 6. Consistent with the 1984 Cable Act's cross-ownership restriction, the Commission prohibited LECs offering video dialtone service from providing video programming directly to subscribers in their telephone service areas, either through the telephone operating company or through an affiliate. A LEC would be deemed to "provide" video programming if it determined how video programming is presented for sale to subscribers, including making decisions concerning the bundling, or "tiering" of the programming or the price, terms, or conditions on which the programming is offered to subscribers. In addition, LECs were precluded from holding an ownership interest of 5 percent or more in a video programmer that offers service in a LEC's telephone service area. At the same time, however, we recommended that Congress amend the 1984 Cable Act to permit LECs, subject to appropriate safeguards, to provide video programming directly to subscribers in their telephone service areas. We stated that if Congress repealed the ban, we would consider imposing certain safeguards on LECs providing video programming directly to subscribers. These safeguards included: a structural separation requirement; a requirement that the LEC's video programming services be provided through the video dialtone platform that provides service to multiple video programmers; and a limit on the percentage of overall platform capacity a LEC could use to transmit its own programming. 7. In October 1994, we affirmed the basic video dialtone framework, while modifying our specific video dialtone rules and policies in various respects. We also affirmed and reiterated our recommendation that Congress repeal the 1984 Cable Act cross- ownership ban. We stated that "[g]iven the enormous growth of the cable industry during the past decade, the risk of telephone companies preemptively eliminating competition in the video marketplace has lessened significantly." We noted that while there remains some risk of anticompetitive behavior by LECs, this risk can and should be addressed through our video dialtone framework and other appropriate regulatory safeguards. We did not comment on the need for any particular safeguards, indicating instead that we would address these issues in a subsequent proceeding. 8. Congress has not repealed the telco-cable cross- ownership restriction. Several federal courts have, however, declared the ban unconstitutional as a violation of the First Amendment. The Fourth Circuit, for example, determined that the cross-ownership ban violates the free speech clause because it is not "narrowly tailored to serve a significant government interest" and does not make ample alternative methods of communication available that are "sufficiently similar to the method foreclosed by the regulation." III. FOURTH FURTHER NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING A. Governing Statutory Provisions 9. LEC provision of video programming raises questions about whether Title II, Title VI, or both, would govern particular LEC video offerings, and how these provisions might apply to a LEC's provision of video programming directly to subscribers within its telephone service area and over facilities used to provide both voice and video services. We now seek comment on these issues and on the analysis we offer below. 1. Application of Title II to LEC Video Programming Offerings 10. We first tentatively conclude that telephone companies should be permitted to provide video programming over Title II video dialtone platforms. We recently reaffirmed our conclusion that the construction of video dialtone systems would serve the public interest goals of facilitating competition in the provision of video programming services, encouraging efficient investment in our national information infrastructure, and fostering the availability to the American public of new and diverse sources of video programming. Two U.S. Courts of Appeals have now held unconstitutional the specific statutory basis for prohibiting a telephone company from providing, directly or indirectly, programming over its own video dialtone platform. In light of the public interest benefits of a video dialtone platform, which provides multiple video programmers with common carrier-based access to end users, we tentatively conclude, in the absence of Section 533(b), that we should not ban telephone companies from providing their own video programming over their video dialtone platforms. We note that we allow telephone companies to use their networks to provide their own enhanced services today, subject to safeguards. Thus, in the absence of a demonstration of a significant governmental interest to the contrary, we propose to allow telephone companies to provide video programming over their own video dialtone platforms, subject to appropriate safeguards. We seek comment on this proposal, and on whether any such significant governmental interest to support a ban exists and, if it does, whether a ban would be a narrowly tailored restriction on the telephone companies' First Amendment rights. 11. A second Title II issue is whether we can, and should, require telephone companies to provide video programming only over video dialtone platforms. Even before the recent court decisions invalidating the telco-cable cross-ownership ban, there were three circumstances in which LECs could provide video programming directly to subscribers. Within their telephone service areas, LECs have been permitted to provide video programming in areas covered by the rural exemption to the telco- cable cross-ownership ban, or if they received a waiver of Sections 613(b)(1) or (b)(2). In both these situations, we have required LECs to obtain authorization under Section 214 of the Communications Act before constructing facilities. In addition, outside their telephone service area, LECs have been able to purchase an existing cable system or apply for a franchise to construct a new cable system. A LEC is not required to apply for Section 214 authorization if it is constructing facilities for the provision of cable service outside of its telephone service area. In all these instances, there was a video programming offering that was treated as a traditional cable offering requiring a franchise under Title VI. 12. In these circumstances, however, LECs have not been authorized to use their local exchange facilities to provide cable service, but, rather, to construct or purchase interests in separate cable facilities. Indeed, as noted by the court in NCTA v. FCC (1994), it was not until after the 1984 Cable Act that technological advances have made it practical to deliver video signals over the same common carrier networks that are used to provide telephone service. Previously, as the court noted, "[a] telephone company that wanted to provide cable service would have had to construct a coaxial cable distribution system parallel to its telephone system." 13. We seek comment on whether we have authority under Section 214 to require LECs that seek to provide video programming directly to subscribers in their telephone service areas to do so on a video dialtone common carrier platform and not on a non-common carrier cable television facility. We seek comment on what circumstance would warrant such a requirement, and specifically on whether we should require use of a video dialtone platform whenever a LEC provides video services over facilities that are also used in the provision of telephone services. We seek comment on our authority generally to require LECs seeking Section 214 authority to acquire or construct video facilities to comply with our video dialtone framework. 2. Application of Title VI to LEC Provision of Video Programming 14. We now seek comment on the circumstances, if any, in which a LEC that, by court decision, is not subject to the 1984 Cable Act telco-cable cross-ownership ban may offer a cable service subject to Title VI in lieu of a Title II video dialtone offering. We also seek comment on the extent to which Title VI should apply to video programming provided by LECs on a Title II video dialtone system. As noted, we have previously held that LEC provision of a common carrier video dialtone platform is not subject to Title VI of the Act. In particular, we found that such LECs are not offering "cable service," and are not operating a "cable system" within the meaning of Title VI. We reasoned that LECs did not actively participate in the selection and distribution of video programming because they were precluded from providing video programming directly to subscribers in their telephone service areas. We also concluded that video dialtone facilities are not cable systems because they are common carrier facilities subject to Title II of the Act which, under Commission rules, could not be used for LEC provision of video programming directly to subscribers in the LEC's telephone service area. 15. We now seek comment on whether, if a LEC, or its affiliate, does provide video programming over its video dialtone system and actively engages in the selection and distribution of such programming, that LEC, or its affiliate, is subject to Title VI. We seek comment on the Commission's legal authority to determine whether some, but not all, provisions of Title VI relating to cable operators would apply to a LEC that provides video programming over its video dialtone platform. We also seek comment on whether the application of some or all provisions of Title VI would result in a regulatory framework that is duplicative of, or inconsistent with, federal or state regulation of communications common carriage. For example, the goals of the leased access provision of Title VI could be met through obligations Title II imposes on a LEC as the provider of the video dialtone platform whether or not the LEC as a video service provider provides its own leased access channels. We seek comment on the potential impact of our determinations in this proceeding on existing grants by state and local authorities of public rights-of-way. We also invite parties to discuss both the legal and practical implications of requiring, or not requiring, telephone companies providing video programming over their own video dialtone systems to comply with each of the various provisions of Title VI. In the event that Title VI cable rate regulation rules apply, we seek comment on how such rules would apply to a LEC providing video programming directly to subscribers over its own video dialtone platform. 16. In addition, we seek comment on whether, if Title VI does not apply to telephone companies' provision of video programming on video dialtone facilities, the Commission should adopt, under Title II, provisions that are analogous to certain aspects of Title VI. For example, we seek comment on whether we should adopt rules governing program access by competing distributors, carriage agreements between video service providers and unaffiliated programmers, and vertical ownership restrictions. 17. Finally, we note that the court's opinion in NCTA v. FCC (1994) is consistent with the Commission's reasoning in the First Report and Order that a LEC providing video dialtone service does not require a local franchise because the LEC does not provide the video programming. We seek comment on whether this view would require a LEC offering video dialtone service to secure a local franchise if that LEC also engages in the provision of video programming carried on its platform. B. Regulatory Safeguards Governing a Local Exchange Carrier's Provision of Video Programming on its Video Dialtone Platform 1. Introduction and Scope 18. In this section we consider what changes, if any, need to be made to our video dialtone regulatory framework if a telephone company, pursuant to an applicable court decision, decides to become a video programmer on its own video dialtone platform in its telephone service area. Our previous decisions establishing the regulatory framework for video dialtone were premised on the assumption that LECs would not be able to be customer-programmers of their own video dialtone systems. Our purpose herein is to determine whether LEC provision of video programming raises new concerns about anticompetitive behavior or cross-subsidy that our existing regulatory framework and safeguards may not sufficiently address. In addressing the issues identified below, parties should address whether we should apply different safeguards for technical and market trials than for commercial offerings of video dialtone. 2. Ownership Affiliation Standards 19. Under our current rules, LECs are prohibited from providing video programming directly to subscribers, and from having a cognizable (i.e., 5 percent or more) financial interest in, or exercising direct or indirect control over, any entity that is deemed to provide video programming in its telephone service area. Although we now propose to permit telephone companies to provide video programming over video dialtone platforms, we propose to retain these ownership affiliation standards to identify those video dialtone programmers that we will consider to be affiliated with LECs providing the underlying common carriage. Under this proposal, if the Commission determines that LEC ownership of video programming requires additional safeguards, those safeguards would apply if the LEC owned five percent or more of a video programmer. We seek comment on this proposal. 3. Safeguards Against Anticompetitive Conduct a. Sufficient Capacity to Serve Multiple Service Providers 20. Under the video dialtone regulatory framework, a LEC is required to provide sufficient capacity to serve multiple service providers on a nondiscriminatory basis. In the Video Dialtone Reconsideration Order, we rejected use of an "anchor programmer," that is, allocation of all or substantially all of the analog capacity of the video dialtone platform to a single programmer. We seek comment on whether there are other across-the-board rules that we should adopt to ensure that video dialtone retains its essential Title II character when a LEC becomes a video programmer on its platform. 21. We seek comment, for instance, on whether we should limit the percentage of its own video dialtone platform capacity that a LEC, or its affiliate, may use. Such a limit could help ensure other programmers access, but may create a risk that some capacity might go unused. We seek comment on what an appropriate limit would be; whether any percentage limit should vary with the platform's capacity; and whether different rules should apply to analog and digital channels. Video dialtone capacity constraints appear likely to be most severe in the short-term, with respect to analog channels, and may be of less concern on future all-digital systems. Commenters should address whether LEC use of video dialtone capacity raises short-term or long-term concerns, and how the probable duration of the problem should affect our regulatory approach. Alternatively, we seek comment on whether LECs that deny capacity to independent programmers should be subject to procedural requirements more detailed than those imposed in the Video Dialtone Reconsideration Order. 22. In the Third Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (Third Further Notice), the Commission sought comment and information regarding channel sharing mechanisms that LECs have proposed as means of making analog capacity available to more customer-programmers than might otherwise be accommodated. Parties addressing limits on LEC use of the video dialtone platforms should comment in this proceeding on the relationship between such channel sharing mechanisms and any proposal to limit LEC use of analog channels. The Third Further Notice also sought comment on two other signal carriage issues: (1) whether the Commission should mandate preferential video dialtone access or rates for commercial broadcasters, public, educational and governmental ("PEG") channels, or other not-for-profit programmers; and (2) whether the Commission should permit LECs to offer preferential treatment to certain programmers on a voluntary ("will carry") basis. Parties should comment in this proceeding on the relationships among mandatory preferential treatment, "will carry," and any proposed limits on a LEC's use of its video dialtone capacity to provide programming directly to subscribers. 23. Another example of potentially anticompetitive conduct that has been cited in the context of cable television service under Title VI involves channel positioning. Programmers assert that cable operators can and do deliberately assign unaffiliated program services to undesirable channel locations. Under Title II, such discriminatory conduct is prohibited. We seek comment on whether LECs that are also video program providers have an increased incentive to use their control over the video dialtone platform to engage in such activities and what, if any, specific safeguards we should implement to prevent such conduct. In particular, we seek comment on whether the channel positioning rules that apply to cable operators in the context of the "must-carry" requirement of Title VI should also apply to video dialtone platform operators providing programming directly to subscribers in their local exchange service areas. b. Non-Ownership Relationships and Activities Between Telephone Companies and Video Programmers 24. In the Video Dialtone Reconsideration Order, the Commission affirmed, with certain modifications, its decision to permit LECs to enter into non-ownership relationships with video programmers that exceed a carrier-user relationship. Under the modified rules, a LEC is permitted to provide enhanced and other nonregulated services related to the provision of video programming (e.g., billing and collection or video gateway services) to any video programmer in its telephone service area, provided that the area is substantially served (i.e., 70 percent of the households in that area) by a video dialtone platform. In addition, a LEC is not restricted by our rules regarding other types of non-ownership relationships with video programmers who are not franchised cable operators. 25. At the same time, however, the Commission did not permit LECs to exceed the carrier-user relationship with cable operators, except to provide enhanced or other nonregulated services related to the provision of video programming in an area substantially served by a video dialtone platform, or to lease cable drop wires. In addition, the Commission generally prohibited affiliations between LECs and any video programmer for the purpose of operating a basic video dialtone platform. 26. After C&P Tel. Co. v. U.S. and U S West v. U.S., we propose, at a minimum, to retain these restrictions as safeguards against LEC anticompetitive conduct and to promote further LEC deployment of broadband services. We believe that the restrictions on non-ownership affiliations between LECs and cable operators are important to the Commission's goal of promoting competition in the video services marketplace, and are not overbroad infringements on LEC First Amendment rights. Parties should comment on the proposal to retain these safeguards and should describe any specific additional measures they believe necessary to safeguard against anticompetitive conduct by LECs that offer programming on their own video dialtone systems. c. Acquisition of Cable Facilities 27. Throughout much of the video dialtone proceeding, the Commission has expressed a concern that LEC acquisition of in- region cable facilities to provide video dialtone could impede competition. In the Video Dialtone Reconsideration Order, the Commission substantially affirmed its decision to prohibit telephone companies from acquiring cable facilities in their telephone service areas for the provision of video dialtone. We continue to believe that this ban will benefit the public interest by promoting greater competition in the delivery of video services, increasing the diversity of video programming available to consumers, and advancing the deployment of the national communications infrastructure. We tentatively conclude that the ban on LEC acquisition of cable facilities for the provision of video dialtone does not impermissibly restrict LEC speech under C&P Tel. Co. v. U.S. and U S West v. U.S., and seek comment on this conclusion. 28. In the Third Further Notice, the Commission recognized that some markets may be incapable of supporting two video delivery systems. The Commission was concerned that, in such markets, the prohibition could preclude establishment of video dialtone service, thereby denying consumers the benefits of competition and diversity of programming sources that our video dialtone regulatory framework is designed to promote. As a result, the Commission requested parties to suggest criteria that would permit us to identify those markets in which two wire-based multi-channel video delivery systems would not be viable. We seek comment on how, if at all, the decisions in C&P Tel. Co. v. U.S. and U S West v. U.S. should affect our consideration of criteria for allowing exceptions to our two-wire policy. We also seek comment on whether we should ban telephone company acquisition of cable facilities, with or without exceptions, if (a) Title VI applies to telephone companies providing programming on their own video dialtone platforms; or (b) telephone companies are permitted to become traditional cable operators in their own service areas instead of constructing video dialtone platforms. d. Joint Marketing and Customer Proprietary Network Information 29. In the Video Dialtone Reconsideration Order, the Commission also affirmed its decision to permit LECs to engage in joint marketing of basic and enhanced video services, and of basic video and non-video services. We found that significant public interest benefits can accrue from the efficiencies and innovations that may be obtained by permitting LECs to engage in joint marketing of basic and enhanced video services, and of basic video and non-video services. We also found that the record on reconsideration did not support a finding that joint marketing of common carrier video and telephony services would have an anticompetitive impact on the provision of video programming to end users. We now seek comment on whether LEC provision of video programming directly to end users requires that we revisit our analysis of joint marketing issues. 30. In the Bell Atlantic Market Trial Order the Commission authorized Bell Atlantic to conduct a six-month video dialtone market trial that will include provision of video programming directly to subscribers by a Bell Atlantic affiliate as well as by independent video programmers. Pending resolution of the instant rulemaking proceeding, we conditioned Bell Atlantic's authorization on its compliance with existing safeguards for the provision of nonregulated services, including enhanced services, and with several additional, interim safeguards against discrimination. We seek comment on whether any or all of these interim safeguards should be adopted as permanent requirements for LECs that provide video programming over their own video dialtone platforms. 31. Included among the Commission's existing nonstructural safeguards are customer proprietary network information (CPNI) requirements. Under these requirements, the Commission limits the BOCs' and GTE's use of CPNI; requires them to make CPNI available to competitive enhanced service providers (ESPs) designated by a customer; and requires that they make available to ESPs non-proprietary aggregated CPNI on the same terms and conditions on which they make such (CPNI) available to their own enhanced service personnel. In the Video Dialtone Reconsideration Order, the Commission affirmed its decision to apply existing enhanced services CPNI rules to video dialtone. We determined that there was insufficient evidence to conclude that our existing CPNI rules do not properly balance our CPNI goals relating to privacy, efficiency, and competitive equity in the context of video dialtone. The Commission also required the BOCs and GTE to provide additional information regarding the kinds of CPNI to which they will have access as a result of providing video dialtone service and indicated its intent to seek further comment on such information. We now seek additional comment and information on whether LEC provision of video programming impacts the balancing of our goals for CPNI. 32. In addition to concerns over possible anticompetitive use of CPNI, parties should discuss whether LEC provision of video programming raises new concerns regarding consumer privacy. Parties that perceive a greater threat to consumer privacy should describe with specificity their concerns, and suggest specific safeguards for protecting consumer privacy, and explain how these suggestions benefit the public interest. 33. We also seek comment on safeguards to ensure nondiscriminatory access to network technical information. In the Bell Atlantic Market Trial Order, the Commission required Bell Atlantic to provide all video programmers with nondiscriminatory access to technical information concerning the basic video dialtone platform and related equipment. The Commission also noted that, in the circumstances of the market trial, Bell Atlantic would also be subject to the more specific Computer III network disclosure rules. We seek comment on whether the Bell Atlantic condition should be adopted as a permanent safeguard. We also ask parties to address whether the Computer III network disclosure rules should be modified in any way for application in the video dialtone context. 4. Safeguards Against Cross-Subsidization of Video Programming Activities 34. In the Video Dialtone Reconsideration Order, the Commission determined that price cap regulation and accounting safeguards would be effective to prevent cross-subsidization of video dialtone-related nonregulated activities. We tentatively conclude that these safeguards against cross-subsidization apply to LEC provision of video programming just as they would to any other activity not regulated as Title II common carrier service, and that the existing rules are adequate to forestall cross- subsidy of the video programming activity. We seek comment on these tentative conclusions. 35. Assuming we do not require structural separation, LECs will have the flexibility to conduct video programming activities both within the telephone operating company and through affiliates. For those video programming activities conducted in the operating company, the LEC will be required to record costs and revenues in accordance with Part 32 of the Commission's Rules, the Uniform System of Accounts (USOA), and to separate the costs of video programming activity from the costs of regulated telephone service in accordance with the Part 64 joint cost rules. We tentatively conclude that these rules are adequate to prevent cross-subsidization of video programming activities. We also tentatively conclude that we will apply to video programming activities the rule adopted in the Video Dialtone Reconsideration Order requiring LECs to amend their cost allocation manuals to reflect video dialtone-related nonregulated activities within 30 days of receiving video dialtone facilities authorization. We seek comment on these tentative conclusions. 36. If a LEC chooses for business reasons to provide video programming through an affiliate, the accounting treatment of operating company transactions with that affiliate will be governed by the affiliate transactions rules. We seek comment on whether amendments to those rules are needed to safeguard against abuses in transactions between LECs and affiliated video program providers. Specifically, we seek comment on whether we should amend Section 32.27 to clarify that any video program provider that is considered, because of a LEC's five percent ownership interest, to be a LEC affiliate for purposes of applying video dialtone safeguards will also be considered an "affiliate" for purposes of the affiliate transactions rule. 5. Structural Separation 37. At divestiture, the Commission initially applied the Computer II structural separation requirements to the customer premises equipment (CPE) and enhanced services operations of the BOCs. The Commission removed the structural separation requirement for CPE in 1987. In reaching that decision, the Commission found that the BOCs had a small share of, and could not dominate, the competitive CPE market; that concerns about cross-subsidy and discrimination could be addressed through nonstructural safeguards; and that the net benefits to telecommunications users of allowing the BOCs flexibility in marketing CPE were greater than the net benefits of structural separation. 38. In the Computer III proceeding, the Commission replaced its requirement that BOCs offer enhanced services through separate subsidiaries with a set of nonstructural safeguards. Those nonstructural safeguards were intended to protect against discrimination and cross-subsidization while avoiding the inefficiencies associated with structural separation. Using a cost/benefit analysis, the Commission concluded that, when compared with nonstructural safeguards, the costs of structural separation outweighed the benefits. These costs included decreased efficiency, innovation, and service availability. The Commission determined that the provision of enhanced services on an integrated basis would allow BOCs to capture certain efficiencies, and capitalize on economies of scope and cost savings created by removing the need for duplicative personnel for sales, marketing, repair and installation, and research and development. In addition, the Commission believed that structural separation was an unnecessary government intrusion into business judgments regarding corporate organization. 39. We seek comment on whether our approach to these questions should differ when BOCs provide video programming. Specifically, we seek comment as to whether there are aspects of the video programming business that warrant our treating BOC provision of video programming differently from the way we treat BOC provision of CPE and enhanced services generally. We also seek comment on whether any structural separation requirement should apply to LECs other than the BOCs. Commenting parties should specifically identify what aspects warrant different treatment, and what form of separation would be appropriate. Parties should also offer information concerning the relative costs and benefits of structural separation. 6. Pole Attachments 40. The Commission has long been concerned that telephone companies would use their control over poles and conduit space to disadvantage their competition. Section 63.57 of our rules requires LECs seeking to provide channel service to show in their Section 214 applications that the cable system for which they would be providing channel service had pole attachment rights or conduit space available "at reasonable charges and without undue restrictions on the uses that may be made of the channel by the operator." This rule is intended to prevent LECs from foreclosing competition by denying cable systems reasonable access to their pole or conduit space. 41. In the Third Further Notice, the Commission sought comment on whether a similar rule should apply to LECs providing video dialtone service. We now seek additional comment on that proposal in light of C&P Tel. Co. v. U.S and U S West v. U.S. Parties should address whether incentives to abuse control over pole and conduit space are increased if a LEC decides to offer video programming within its telephone service area. In addition, as requested in the Third Further Notice, advocates of such a rule should propose specific language, and should explain how the rule would prevent anticompetitive conduct. 7. Legal and Constitutional Issues a. Waiver of the Cross-Ownership Ban 42. Section 533(b)(4) of the Communications Act provides that, upon a "showing of good cause," the Commission may waive the 1984 Cable Act's cross-ownership ban. Under Section 533(b)(4), a waiver "shall be granted by the Commission upon a finding that the issuance of such waiver is justified by the particular circumstances demonstrated by the petitioner, taking into account the policy of this subsection." In GTE California, Inc. v. FCC, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit found moot a case in which the FCC had rescinded a waiver granted under Section 533(b)(4). In the course of so holding, and in response to GTE's argument that the waiver should not have been rescinded because Section 533(b) is unconstitutional, the Ninth Circuit stated that "GTECA did not present the constitutional issue to the Commission at a point in this proceeding where it could have tried to obviate the constitutional question by granting discretionary relief, such as a permanent waiver." 43. In GTE California v. FCC, the Ninth Circuit raises the question whether the Commission may establish conditions under which it will waive the telco-cable cross-ownership ban in order to obviate potential constitutional difficulties. For example, the Commission may decide to authorize any telephone company to provide video programming, whether or not it has obtained an injunction, if it complies with the safeguards we will establish in this proceeding. Our tentative conclusion is that such a reading of Section 533(b)(4) is consistent with the terms of the statute. "Good cause" is commonly interpreted to include changed circumstances, and the circumstances that led us to institute the cross-ownership rule in 1970 have changed dramatically. The cable industry is no longer a fledgling industry. Instead, as the Supreme Court recently recognized, "Congress found that over 60 percent of the households with television sets subscribe to cable . . . and for those households cable has replaced over-the- air broadcast television as the primary provider of video programming." 44. We also tentatively conclude that the safeguards we will establish will constitute "particular circumstances . . ., taking into account the policy" of Section 533(b), under which waivers are warranted. We do not intend to waive the telco-cable cross-ownership rule altogether, so that telephone companies may purchase cable companies that do not face competition and offer their own programming via a monopoly cable system. Rather, and in fulfillment of the policy underlying Section 533(b), we intend to promote competition in the multi-channel video programming market by establishing particular conditions under which telephone companies may establish video dialtone systems that will compete with existing cable operators, thus providing consumers with a choice of multi-channel video systems. 45. The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit recognized, in NCTA v. FCC (1990), that "the policy of this subsection is to promote competition." However, in that decision the D.C. Circuit also appeared to give a narrow reading to the scope of the waiver provision. Specifically, the court of appeals remanded a decision in which the Commission had granted a waiver because the court concluded that the Commission had not shown that the participation of an affiliate of a telephone company in constructing transmission facilities was "essential to the success" of an experimental video programming project. But at that time no court had declared Section 533(b) unconstitutional, and the D.C. Circuit did not consider whether a broader reading of Section 533(b)(4) was appropriate to render the provision constitutional. The Supreme Court has recently reiterated that "a statute is to be construed where fairly possible so as to avoid substantial constitutional questions." A reading of the waiver provision that authorizes telephone companies that comply with the safeguards we will establish to provide video programming should render Section 533(b) constitutional, because in those circumstances any burden on speech by telephone companies will be minimal. Hence, under U.S. v. X-Citement Video, a broad interpretation of Section 533(b)(4) seems warranted. We seek comment on these tentative conclusions. b. Constitutionality of Proposed Safeguards 46. As the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit stated in C&P Tel. Co. v. U.S., in order for a content-neutral government regulation of speech, such as the cross-ownership ban, to be constitutional, that regulation must be "narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and ... leave open ample alternative channels for communication of the information." The court determined that the government's interests in promoting competition and in facilitating the availability of multiple information sources are significant. The court decided, however, that the ban against telephone companies operating as cable service providers was not narrowly tailored and that there were available less burdensome alternatives to the ban. The court observed that the Commission had already identified one possible alternative in its recommendation to Congress regarding repeal of the ban: Congress could limit the telephone company to a fixed percentage of available channels, while requiring the remainder of channels to be made available to others on a common carrier basis. Finally, the court determined that, under the ban, there did not exist for telephone companies ample alternative methods of communication. 47. In U S West v. U.S., the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit agreed with the Fourth Circuit that (assuming it served a significant government interest) the ban was not sufficiently narrowly tailored. The court found that the evidence submitted by U S West demonstrated that the procompetitive goals of the ban can be "achieved through a variety of less speech-restrictive means." Unlike the Fourth Circuit, however, the Ninth Circuit, determining that it was unnecessary to do so, did not reach the issue of the availability of "ample alternative channels of communication." 48. With respect to all proposals set forth above for safeguards on LEC provision of video programming, we seek comment on whether such safeguards, whether individually, or in any combination, would be consistent with the First Amendment, the Fourth Circuit's decision in C&P Tel. Co. v. U.S., and the Ninth Circuit's decision in U S West v. U.S. IV. EX PARTE PRESENTATIONS 49. This Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is a non-restricted notice-and-comment rulemaking proceeding. Ex parte presentations are permitted, except during the Sunshine Agenda period, provided that they are disclosed as provided in the Commission's rules. See generally 47 C.F.R.  1.1202, 1.1203, 1.1206. V. INITIAL REGULATORY FLEXIBILITY ANALYSIS 50. Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, 5 U.S.C.  601-612, the Commission's Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis with respect to the Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is as follows: 51. Reason for Action: The Commission is issuing this Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to consider whether additional or modified safeguards and rule changes may be necessary or appropriate in the context of the video dialtone regulatory framework, when a telephone company provides video programming directly to subscribers in its telephone service area. 52. Objectives: The objective of the Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is to provide an opportunity for public comment and to provide a record for a Commission decision on the issues stated above. 53. Legal Basis: The Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is adopted pursuant to Sections 1, 2, 4, 201-205, 215, 218, 220, and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C.  151, 152, 154, 201-205, 215, 218, 220, and 303(r). 54. Description, potential impact, and number of small entities affected: Any rule changes that might occur as a result of this proceeding could impact entities which are small business entities, as defined in Section 601(3) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act. After evaluating the comments in this proceeding, the Commission will further examine the impact of any rule changes on small entities and set forth our findings in the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. The Secretary shall send a copy of this Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration in accordance with Section 603(a) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, Pub. L. No. 96-354, 94 Stat. 1164, 5 U.S.C.  601, et seq. 55. Reporting, recordkeeping, and other compliance requirement: None. 56. Federal rules which overlap, duplicate or conflict with the Commission's proposal: None. 57. Any significant alternatives minimizing impact on small entities and consistent with state objectives: The Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking seeks comment on a variety of alternatives. 58. Comments are solicited: Written comments are requested on this Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. These comments must be filed in accordance with the same filing deadlines set for comments on the other issues in this Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, but they must have a separate and distinct heading designating them as responses to the Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. The Secretary shall send a copy of the Notice to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration in accordance with Section 603(a) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C.  601, et seq. VI. COMMENT FILING DATES 59. Pursuant to applicable procedures set forth in Sections 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission's rules, 47 C.F.R.  1.415, 1.419, interested parties may file comments on or before March 6, 1995, and reply comments on or before March 27, 1995. To file formally in this proceeding, you must file an original and four copies of all comments, reply comments, and supporting comments. If you want each Commissioner to receive a personal copy of your comments, you must file an original and nine copies. Comments and reply comments should be sent to Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission, Washington, D.C. 20554, with a copy to Peggy Reitzel of the Common Carrier Bureau, Room 544, and James Yancey of the Cable Services Bureau, Room 408C. Parties should also file one copy of any documents filed in this docket with the Commission's copy contractor, International Transcription Services, Inc., 2100 M Street, N.W., Suite 140, Washington, D.C. 20037. Comments and reply comments will be available for public inspection during regular business hours in the FCC Reference Center (Room 239), 1919 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. VII. ORDERING CLAUSES 60. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED that, pursuant to Sections 1, 4, 201-205, 215, and 218 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C.  151, 154, 201-205, 215, 218, and 220, a FOURTH FURTHER NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING IS HEREBY ADOPTED. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION William F. Caton Acting Secretary