[Federal Register Volume 90, Number 163 (Tuesday, August 26, 2025)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 41726-41756]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2025-16332]



[[Page 41725]]

Vol. 90

Tuesday,

No. 163

August 26, 2025

Part IV





 Federal Communications Commission





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47 CFR Part 1





Accelerating Wireline Broadband Deployment by Removing Barriers to 
Infrastructure Investment; Final Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 90, No. 163 / Tuesday, August 26, 2025 / 
Rules and Regulations

[[Page 41726]]


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FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION

47 CFR Part 1

[WC Docket No. 17-84; FCC 25-38; FR ID 308601]


Accelerating Wireline Broadband Deployment by Removing Barriers 
to Infrastructure Investment

AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: In this document, a Fifth Report and Order adopted by the 
Federal Communications Commission (Commission) establishes rules 
ensuring greater collaboration and cooperation between utilities and 
attachers, establishing a timeline for large pole attachment requests, 
revising and improving the pole attachment timeline, and establishing a 
deadline for the contractor approval process. In addition, the 
Commission denies in part and grants in part a Petition for 
Clarification and/or Reconsideration from the Edison Electric Institute 
of portions of the Commission's December 2023 Fourth Report and Order, 
Declaratory Ruling, and Third Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. 
Finally, the Commission denies a Petition for Reconsideration from the 
Coalition of Concerned Utilities of a portion of the Fourth Report and 
Order.

DATES: Effective September 25, 2025, except that the amendments to 
Sec. Sec.  1.1403(b), 1.1411(c) through (k), and 1.1412(a) and (b), (e) 
of the Commission's rules, which may contain new or modified 
information collection requirements, will not become effective until 
the Office of Management and Budget completes review of any information 
collection requirements that the Wireline Competition Bureau determines 
is required under the Paperwork Reduction Act. The Federal 
Communications Commission will publish a document in the Federal 
Register announcing the effective date.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information about this 
proceeding, please contact Michele Berlove, FCC Wireline Competition 
Bureau, Competition Policy Division, at (202) 418-1477, or 
[email protected], or Michael Ray, FCC Wireline Competition 
Bureau, Competition Policy Division, at (202) 418-0357 or 
[email protected]. For additional information concerning the 
Paperwork Reduction Act proposed information collection requirements 
contained in this document, send an email to [email protected] or contact 
Nicole Ongele at (202) 418-2991.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Fifth 
Report and Order in WC Docket No. 17-84, FCC 25-38, adopted on July 24, 
2025, and released on July 25, 2025. The full text of this document is 
available for public inspection at the following internet address: 
https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-25-38A1.pdf. To request 
materials in accessible formats for people with disabilities (e.g., 
Braille, large print, electronic files, audio format), send an email to 
[email protected] or call the Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau at 
(202) 418-0530.

Synopsis

I. Introduction

    1. The Federal Communications Commission is focused on expanding 
access to high-speed broadband services. One way the agency is 
delivering on that goal is by accelerating the buildout of next-
generation infrastructure. Today, we continue our infrastructure 
efforts by promoting fast and efficient deployment of broadband 
facilities on utility poles. As the Commission previously noted, access 
to the vital infrastructure of utility poles must be ``swift, 
predictable, safe, and affordable, to ensure that broadband providers 
can continue to enter new markets and deploy facilities that support 
high-speed broadband.'' And as more and more consumers rely on mobile 
wireless services to access broadband, pole access becomes increasingly 
essential for the small wireless antennas and wireline backhaul on 
which these wireless services depend.
    2. The Commission has taken significant steps in recent years to 
expedite the pole attachment process, but there is more work to be 
done. Today, we take further action to advance the goal of ubiquitous 
high-speed broadband by revising our pole attachment rules to eliminate 
barriers to efficient broadband deployment by building on the work 
begun in the Commission's December 2023 Fourth Report and Order, 
Declaratory Ruling, and Third Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. 
Specifically, we adopt rules (1) ensuring greater collaboration and 
cooperation between utilities and attachers, (2) establishing a 
timeline for large pole attachment requests, (3) improving the pole 
attachment timeline, and (4) speeding up the contractor approval 
process. We also seek comment in the Further Notice on ways to further 
facilitate the processing of pole attachment applications and make-
ready to enable faster broadband deployment and, in response to a 
Petition for Declaratory Ruling filed by CTIA, seek comment on whether 
light poles fall within the purview of Section 224(f) of the 
Communications Act of 1934, as amended (the Act). We then deny in part 
and grant in part a Petition for Clarification and/or Reconsideration 
from the Edison Electric Institute of portions of the Declaratory 
Ruling. Finally, we deny a Petition for Reconsideration from the 
Coalition of Concerned Utilities of a portion of the Fourth Wireline 
Infrastructure Order, 89 FR 2151 (Jan. 12, 2024).

II. Background

    3. Section 224(f) of the Act requires that utilities provide cable 
television systems and telecommunications carriers with 
nondiscriminatory access to their poles. (For purposes of this 
statutory provision, ``utility'' is defined as ``any person who is a 
local exchange carrier or an electric, gas, water, steam, or other 
public utility, and who owns or controls poles, ducts, conduits, or 
rights-of-way used, in whole or in part, for any wire communications.'' 
Railroads, cooperatives, and federally- and state-owned entities are 
expressly excluded from this definition. The term ``pole attachment'' 
is defined as ``any attachment by a cable television system or provider 
of telecommunications service to a pole, duct, conduit, or right-of-way 
owned or controlled by a utility.'') Section 224(b)(1) of the Act 
requires the Commission to set the rates, terms, and conditions for 
pole attachments to provide that such rates, terms, and conditions are 
just and reasonable. (Note that Section 224(c) of the Act exempts from 
Commission jurisdiction those pole attachments in states that have 
elected to regulate pole attachments themselves (so-called ``reverse 
preemption''). To date, 23 states and the District of Columbia have 
opted out of Commission regulation of pole attachments in their 
jurisdictions.) The Commission has rules intended to ensure 
nondiscriminatory pole access and just and reasonable rates, along with 
a robust complaint process to ensure that our rules are enforced.
    4. Pole Attachment Process. Attaching equipment to utility poles is 
a multi-stage process. In the first stage, the utility reviews the pole 
attachment application submitted by the communications attacher for 
completeness. In the second stage, the utility must determine whether 
to grant the complete application (review on the merits) and undertake 
a survey of the poles for which access has been

[[Page 41727]]

requested. In the third stage, the utility must prepare for the 
attacher an estimate of the cost of preparing the affected poles for 
the new attachments. In the fourth stage, utilities (or the existing 
attachers, if they want to move their own existing equipment) perform 
the work to make the affected poles ready for the new attachments (also 
known as ``make-ready'' work) and then the new attachers deploy their 
equipment on the poles. The make-ready stage is the most time-intensive 
stage in the pole attachment process. (Make-ready is defined as ``the 
modification or replacement of a utility pole, or of the lines or 
equipment on the utility pole, to accommodate additional facilities on 
the utility pole.'' There are several different kinds of make-ready. 
Complex make-ready refers to ``transfers and work within the 
communications space that would be reasonably likely to cause a service 
outage(s) or facility damage, including work such as splicing of any 
communication attachment or relocation of existing wireless 
attachments. Any and all wireless activities, including those involving 
mobile, fixed, and point-to-point wireless communications and wireless 
internet service providers, are to be considered complex.'' Simple 
make-ready is ``where existing attachments in the communications space 
of a pole could be transferred without any reasonable expectation of a 
service outage or facility damage and does not require splicing of any 
existing communication attachment or relocation of an existing wireless 
attachment.'' There also is make-ready above the communications space 
on a pole, typically involving work either in the electric space or at 
the pole-top.)
    5. Existing Timelines. The Commission's rules set forth deadlines 
for each stage in the pole attachment process. A utility has up to 10 
business days after receiving a new attachment application to determine 
whether it is complete. (If the utility timely notifies the new 
attacher that its application is not complete, it must specify all 
reasons for finding it incomplete, and any resubmitted application 
shall be deemed complete within 5 business days after its resubmission, 
unless the utility notifies the attacher of how the resubmitted 
application is insufficient. The new attacher may follow the 
resubmission procedure as many times as it chooses so long as it makes 
a bona fide attempt to correct the reasons identified by the utility, 
and in each case the 5-day deadline shall apply to the utility's 
review.) Upon receipt of a complete application, (A new attacher's 
attachment application is considered complete if it provides the 
utility with the information necessary under its procedures, as 
specified in a master service agreement or in requirements that are 
available in writing publicly at the time of submission of the 
application, to begin to survey the affected poles) the utility has 45 
days in which to make a decision on the application and complete any 
surveys to determine whether and where attachment is feasible and what 
make-ready is required. The utility then must provide an estimate of 
all make-ready charges within 14 days of its response granting access 
or, where the new attacher has performed the survey, within 14 days of 
receipt of such survey. The new attacher has 14 days or until 
withdrawal of the estimate by the utility, whichever is longer, to 
accept the estimate and make payment. Once the utility receives payment 
of the estimate, it then must notify existing attachers on the pole of 
the new attachment. The existing attachers then must move their 
equipment to make room for the new attachment within 30 days of 
receiving notice from the utility for attachments in the communications 
space or 90 days for attachments above the communications space. 
(Different portions of the vertical pole serve different functions. The 
bottom of the pole generally is unusable for most types of attachments. 
Above that, the lower usable space on a pole--the ``communications 
space''--houses low-voltage communications equipment, including fiber, 
coaxial cable, copper wiring, and small wireless antennas. The topmost 
portion of the pole--the ``electric space''--houses high-voltage 
electrical equipment. Work in the electric space generally is 
considered more dangerous than work in the communications space. 
Historically, communications attachers used only the communications 
space; however, mobile wireless providers increasingly are seeking 
access to areas above the communications space to attach pole-top small 
wireless equipment.) A utility must complete its make-ready work in the 
same time periods, except it may take up to 15 additional days to 
complete make-ready above the communications space. These deadlines 
apply to all pole attachment requests up to the lesser of 300 poles or 
0.5 percent of the utility's poles in a state (Regular Orders). For 
pole attachment requests larger than a Regular Order and up to the 
lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of a utility's poles in a state, a 
utility may add 15 days to the survey period and 45 days to the make-
ready periods. For pole attachment requests larger than the lesser of 
3,000 poles or 5 percent of a utility's poles in a state, our rules 
currently provide that the utility and the attacher must negotiate in 
good faith the timing of the pole attachment process. (Note that a 
utility may treat multiple requests from a single new attacher as one 
request when the requests are filed within 30 days of one another.) 
Utilities may deviate from the pole attachment timelines in our rules--
for the make-ready phase only--for good and sufficient cause that 
renders it infeasible for the utility to complete make-ready within the 
required timeline. (Utilities may deviate from any of the pole 
attachment timelines in our rules before offering the estimate of 
charges if the parties have no agreement specifying the rates, terms, 
and conditions of attachment. In addition, existing attachers may 
deviate from the timelines specified in our rules during the 
performance of complex make-ready for reasons of safety or service 
interruption that renders it infeasible for the existing attacher to 
complete complex make-ready within the timelines.)
    6. Self-Help. In certain instances, our rules allow the new 
attacher to avail itself of self-help for surveys and make-ready work 
when those pole attachment deadlines are not met. (Self-help is not 
available for pole replacements.) For simple surveys and make-ready 
work, our rules allow new attachers to perform the work themselves 
using an approved contractor from a utility list; if the utility does 
not maintain a list of approved contractors, the new attacher can hire 
its own contractor as long as that contractor meets the qualifications 
set forth in our rules and the attacher certifies as such to the 
utility. (Utilities may, but are not required to, maintain a list of 
approved contractors for surveys and simple make-ready work.) For 
surveys and make-ready work that are complex or above the 
communications space, an existing attacher still can avail itself of 
self-help, but it must use a utility-approved contractor. (Utilities 
are required to maintain an up-to-date ``reasonably sufficient list'' 
of approved contractors for self-help surveys and make-ready that is 
complex or above the communications space.)
    7. One-Touch-Make-Ready. In 2018, the Commission adopted a new 
framework that allows attachers to control the surveys, notices, and 
make-ready work necessary to attach their equipment to utility poles in 
certain circumstances. In what is known as one-touch, make-ready 
(OTMR), for an attachment involving simple make-ready, a new attacher 
may elect to

[[Page 41728]]

perform the work to attach its wireline equipment to the communications 
space of a pole. (``Any and all wireless activities, including those 
involving mobile, fixed, and point-to-point wireless communications and 
wireless internet service providers, are to be considered complex.'') 
This framework includes safeguards to promote coordination among 
parties and ensures that new attachers perform the work safely and 
reliably. As the Commission stated at the time, using OTMR will save 
new attachers ``considerable time in gaining access to poles (with 
accelerated deadlines for application review, surveys, and make-ready 
work) and will save substantial costs with one party (rather than 
multiple parties) doing the work to prepare poles for new 
attachments.''
    8. Recent Commission Action. In December 2023, the Commission took 
additional steps to speed-up broadband deployment by making the pole 
attachment process faster, more transparent, and more cost-effective. 
Specifically, the Commission adopted rules: (1) establishing the Rapid 
Broadband Assessment Team (RBAT) to provide coordinated review and 
assessment of qualifying pole attachment disputes and recommend 
effective dispute resolution procedures, and (2) requiring utilities to 
provide to potential attachers, upon request, the information contained 
in their most recent cyclical pole inspection reports, or any 
intervening, periodic reports created before the next cyclical 
inspection, for the poles covered by a submitted attachment 
application, including whether any of the affected poles have been 
``red tagged'' by the utility for replacement, and the scheduled 
replacement date or timeframe. Additionally, the Commission clarified 
that a ``red tagged'' pole is one that the utility has identified as 
needing replacement for any reason other than the pole's lack of 
capacity and provided additional examples of when, under Sec.  
1.1408(b) of our rules, a pole replacement is not ``necessitated 
solely'' as a result of a third party's attachment or modification 
request because the pole already requires replacement at the time of 
the new request. The Commission also clarified the obligation to share 
easement information and the applicable timelines for the processing of 
attachment requests for 3,000 or more poles. (For the processing of 
pole attachment requests, the Commission specifically clarified that 
``when an application is submitted requesting access to more than the 
lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of a utility's poles in the state, 
the lesser of the first 3,000 poles or 5 percent of the utility's poles 
in the state of that application are subject to the make-ready timeline 
set forth in Sec.  1.1411(g)(3), which gives utilities 45 additional 
days beyond the standard make-ready timeline to process attachment 
applications, so long as the attacher designates in its application the 
first 3,000 poles (or 5 percent of the utility's poles in the state) to 
be processed, which the utility must permit the attacher to do.'')
    9. The Coalition of Concerned Utilities (CCU) sought 
reconsideration of the Commission's decision in the Fourth Wireline 
Infrastructure Order requiring utilities to provide their recent 
cyclical pole inspection reports upon request to attachers. The Edison 
Electric Institute (EEI) sought clarification and/or reconsideration of 
certain aspects of the Declaratory Ruling and asked that the Commission 
``(1) clearly define the narrow circumstances in which a utility pole 
owner is required to provide a copy of its easement to an attacher that 
seeks to access a pole within such easement; and (2) remove or clarify 
its ruling that a `pole replacement is not `necessitated solely' by an 
attachment request' if a utility's previous or contemporaneous change 
to its internal construction standards necessitates replacement of an 
existing pole.'' Both petitions remain pending.
    10. The rise in government funding for broadband deployment has 
contributed to a significant increase in deployment of extensive new 
broadband facilities, resulting in a significant increase in the number 
of applications seeking to attach these facilities to large numbers of 
utility poles. Both attachers and utilities acknowledge that these 
increases, along with increases in privately funded projects, have put 
greater demand on utility resources and the pool of qualified 
contractors and have resulted in difficulties and delays in accessing 
poles. As a result, the Commission sought comment in the Third Further 
Notice (89 FR 1859; Jan. 11, 2024) on: (1) a tentative conclusion that 
utilities should have an additional 90 days for make-ready work for 
requests exceeding the lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of the 
utility's poles in a state; (2) whether the Commission should prohibit 
utilities from limiting the number of poles included in a pole 
attachment application and from limiting the number of applications an 
attacher may submit at a time; (3) a proposal that the Commission add 
additional time to the existing timelines for larger orders; (4) 
whether the Commission should create additional make-ready timeline 
tiers for attachment applications of different sizes; (5) a proposal 
that a utility notify an attacher within 15 days after receiving a 
complete application if it cannot conduct the survey within the 
required 45-day period (so that the attacher can elect self-help for 
the survey sooner); (6) whether the Commission should make self-help 
available for the make-ready estimate process; and (7) the impact of 
contractor availability when attachers seek to use their own 
contractors for self-help and whether to amend the Commission's rules 
to make it easier for attachers to use their own contractors for self-
help when there are no contractors available from a utility contractor 
list. Comments on the Third Further Notice were due on February 13, 
2024, and replies were due on March 13, 2024.
    11. CTIA Petition for Declaratory Ruling. In 2019, CTIA filed a 
Petition for Declaratory Ruling in this proceeding. (The CTIA Petition 
was also filed in the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau's Accelerating 
Wireless Broadband Deployment by Removing Barriers to Infrastructure 
Investment proceeding. The Wireline Competition and Wireless 
Telecommunications Bureaus placed the CTIA Petition on public notice 
and in response received dozens of comments, replies, and ex parte 
presentations from communication providers and utility groups. The 
Bureaus twice extended the comment deadlines.) CTIA requested three 
declarations concerning pole attachments in its Petition: (1) that the 
term ``pole'' in Section 224 includes light poles; (2) that utilities 
may not impose ``blanket'' restrictions on access to portions of any 
poles they own; and (3) that utilities may not seek bargained-for terms 
and conditions that are inconsistent with the Commission's pole 
attachment rules. The latter two issues were addressed in a Declaratory 
Ruling released in July 2020. The question of whether the term ``pole'' 
encompasses light poles remains pending.

III. Report and Order

    12. In this Report and Order, we adopt new requirements that will 
aid attachers and utilities in planning for larger broadband 
deployments and in allocating critical contractor resources to ensure 
that large broadband deployments are completed in an efficient and 
timely manner. During this critical time of infrastructure deployment 
and with both utilities and attachers seeking guidance from the 
Commission, these requirements represent a multi-pronged, holistic

[[Page 41729]]

approach that will best balance the difficulties faced by utilities in 
processing large applications against attachers' need for speedier 
deployments, as follows: (1) requiring attachers to provide written 
notice to utilities of forthcoming pole attachment orders that are 
greater than the lesser of 300 poles or 0.5 percent of the utility's 
poles in a state up to the lesser of 6,000 poles or ten percent of a 
utility's poles in a state; (2) providing that an attacher that fails 
to provide timely advance notice of such orders must, upon prompt 
notice from the utility, still wait the relevant advance notice period 
before the applicable timeline begins; (3) imposing a meet-and-confer 
requirement following the requisite advance notice for orders exceeding 
the lesser of 3,000 poles or five percent of a utility's poles in a 
state up to the lesser of 6,000 poles or ten percent of a utility's 
poles in a state; and (4) establishing a new set of timelines for 
utilities to complete each pole access phase for large orders.
    13. We also revise our pole attachment timelines as follows: (1) 
require utilities to notify attachers within 15 days of receiving a 
complete application if they know or reasonably should know that they 
cannot meet the survey deadline, and require utilities to notify 
attachers within 15 days of payment of the estimate, and existing 
attachers to notify utilities and new attachers within 15 days of 
receiving notice from the utility, if they know or reasonably should 
know that they cannot meet the make-ready deadline; (2) add a self-help 
remedy for make-ready estimates, provided certain safeguards are met; 
and (3) prohibit utility-imposed limits on application size and 
frequency that have the effect of restricting the number of pole 
attachments attachers may seek in a given timeframe. We also adopt 
improvements to the contractor approval process. Our current rules 
require that a utility may not unreasonably withhold its consent to an 
attacher request to add qualified contractors to the utility's list of 
contractors approved to do pole work. (As the Commission stated in the 
Third Wireline Infrastructure Order, ``to be reasonable, a utility's 
decision to withhold consent must be prompt, set forth in writing that 
describes the basis for rejection, nondiscriminatory, and based on fair 
application of commercially reasonable requirements for contractors 
relating to issues of safety or reliability.'') To ensure promptness in 
the utility's contractor decision-making, we require utilities to 
respond to a request to add contractors to a utility-approved list 
within 30 days of receiving the request. We note, however, that the 
parties are free to negotiate for a longer approval period. (Parties 
have always been free to reach negotiated agreements with terms that 
differ from our rules.)

A. Advance Notice and Meet-and-Confer Requirements

    14. Both attachers and utilities cite the need for better 
coordination in the pole attachment process. And the Commission has 
always encouraged ``a high degree of pre-planning and coordination 
between attachers and pole owners, to begin as early in the process as 
possible.'' (We note that the advance notice and meet and confer 
requirements adopted here are an outgrowth of the large order 
management issues on which the Commission sought comment in the Third 
Further Notice, particularly: (1) seeking comment on utility concerns 
related to large-order processing, especially workforce availability 
and the submission of multiple applications at the same time; (2) 
asking about steps the Commission could take to facilitate the pole 
attachment process for larger orders; (3) asking about other ways to 
assist utilities in processing the expected increase in large 
applications; and (4) seeking comment on factors identified by 
USTelecom as reasons to give utilities additional time to process 
larger orders--permitting delays, workforce shortages, staffing issues, 
and the coordination required among attachers to make room for a new 
attachment.) To that end, we adopt a requirement that attachers provide 
written advance notice to utilities of Mid-Sized Orders associated with 
a single network deployment (For Mid-Sized Orders only, the advance 
notice requirement is limited to instances where the order threshold 
would be exceeded by pole attachment application(s) that are part of a 
single network deployment project being undertaken by the new 
attacher.) and Large Orders. (Several commenters advocate that we 
extend the advance notice requirement to orders involving government-
funded broadband projects, while EEI supports advance notice for Large 
Orders, but limited only to those involving government-funded broadband 
projects. We disagree with EEI's proposed limitation, as we find that a 
prior notice requirement will benefit the processing of both Mid-Sized 
Orders associated with a single network deployment and Large Orders for 
all broadband projects, including privately funded projects. We note 
that government-funded orders more than likely are Large Orders or Mid-
Sized Orders associated with a single network deployment and thus 
already will be covered by the advance notice requirement. 
Additionally, attachers give no proposed definition of a government-
funded project, nor any size limitation on such an order, and also put 
the onus on the utility to determine whether an order is associated 
with a government-funded project (i.e., allegedly because such grants 
are in the public domain and easily verifiable). Moreover, many 
government-funded projects will involve areas where the utilities are 
cooperatives that are not subject to our rules.) Mid-Sized Orders are 
orders exceeding the lesser of 300 poles or 0.5 percent of a utility's 
poles in a state up to the lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of a 
utility's poles in the state. Large Orders are orders exceeding the 
lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of a utility's poles in a state up 
to the lesser of 6,000 poles or 10 percent of a utility's poles in a 
state. We require the written advance notice to be sent as soon as 
practicable, but not less than 15 days in advance of submitting a Mid-
Sized Order or 60 days in advance of submitting a Large Order, and that 
it shall set forth detailed information that will allow the utility to 
properly assess the potential resource needs for the order. While we 
expect the notice to be as detailed as possible, at the very least it 
must contain (1) the attacher's contact information; (2) description of 
the proposed deployment area(s) and anticipated route(s); (3) an 
anticipated build-out schedule; and (4) a request to meet and confer 
with the utility within 30 days of the date of the notice for a Large 
Order. (There are three categories of information requested by 
Dominion, UTC, and USTelecom that we do not find should be required for 
the advance notice, although such information could be helpful to share 
with the utility, if available at the time of the notice: (1) in the 
case of a government-funded project, all deployment plans prepared in 
connection with the attacher's application for funds; (2) a list of all 
contractors that the attacher seeks to have pre-approved for one-touch 
and self-help make-ready work; and (3) a list of all permits and 
authorizations necessary for the proposed deployment and their status. 
The lists of contractors, permits, and authorizations may not be 
readily discernable until after the Mid-Sized or Large Order is 
submitted, while the detailed deployment plans for government-funded 
projects can be shared after the advance notice is sent.) We do not 
adopt a meet-and-confer

[[Page 41730]]

requirement for Mid-Sized Orders. We also clarify, as requested by 
NCTA, that ``minor changes to routes should not necessitate new notice 
and/or a new meet-and-confer, but that the attacher and utility should 
jointly work to accommodate these changes.''
    15. Smaller orders, up to the lesser of 300 poles or 0.5 percent of 
the utility's poles in a state (Regular Orders) will not be subject to 
this requirement, as such orders do not implicate as many resources as 
larger orders. We also do not impose this new requirement on orders 
that exceed the lesser of 6,000 poles or 10 percent of a utility's 
poles in a state (Very Large Orders) and instead require the parties to 
engage in good faith negotiation of the attachment timelines for such 
orders. We do, however, encourage prior notice for Very Large Orders 
given their attendant complexities and the benefits of coordination and 
collaboration between the parties.
    16. In adopting a written advance notice requirement for Mid-Sized 
Orders associated with a single network deployment and Large Orders, we 
acknowledge the concerns of utilities that ``[w]ithout ample advanced 
notice, there is a risk that attachers may flood pole owners with 
applications predictably leading to delays due to scarcity of 
resources.'' The record does not reflect opposition to this requirement 
for Large Orders, and both utilities and attachers generally agree that 
it will be useful for all parties. However, we disagree with attachers 
who argue that we should not apply an advance notice requirement for 
Mid-Sized Orders. (We disagree with NCTA's assertion that ``[p]rior to 
the release of the Draft Order, utilities had not requested that 
advanced notice requirements apply to smaller or mid-size orders.'' We 
note that both EEI and the Electric Utilities advocated for an advance 
notice for Mid-Sized Orders during the comment period.) Instead, we 
agree with utilities that a written advance notice requirement will 
promote broadband deployment and lead to greater efficiency in the 
processing of not just Large Orders but also Mid-Sized Orders 
associated with a single network deployment, especially with regard to 
allocating important contractor resources. As CCU notes, ``[a]dvance 
notice would enable utilities to better prepare by, for example, 
working to secure as many additional contractor resources as possible 
to support the negotiated timeframes.'' However, in recognition that 
applying the prior notice requirements to Mid-Sized Orders risks 
slowing the process for completing these orders, which according to 
commenters are often not scheduled in advance and can regularly exceed 
300 poles in a thirty-day period, we shorten the advance notice period 
for Mid-Sized Orders associated with a single network deployment to 15 
days. And in light of attachers' concern that ``[t]he 300 poles in a 
30-day period threshold, if it included even unrelated `business as 
usual' builds, would require notice nearly every month,'' we limit the 
advance notice requirement for Mid-Sized Orders to when the threshold 
would be exceeded by pole attachment application(s) that are part of a 
single network deployment project being undertaken by the new attacher.
    17. If an attacher submits an application to the utility without 
giving the required the advance notice, then the utility may promptly 
notify the attacher that it is treating the application as the 
requisite advance notice, that the application will commence the 
advance notice period, and, if it is a Large Order, that the attacher 
must request the meet-and confer required by our rules. If the attacher 
fails to request the meet-and-confer described below, then the advance 
notice period will not begin to run until such request is made. At the 
end of the advance notice period, the new attacher can submit a new 
application or notify the utility that it is continuing with its 
original submission as its application, and the utility may not charge 
any additional or increased application fee. Failure by the utility to 
give prompt notice that it is treating the attacher's application as 
the advance notice will result in the application proceeding to be 
processed under the applicable timelines without an advance notice 
period or meet-and-confer requirement. This approach still will provide 
utilities with the advance notice they assert is routinely lacking. (We 
note that if disputes arise regarding the sufficiency of the attacher's 
notice (especially with regard to the adequacy of the required 
information in the notice), the parties can resort to the RBAT to 
resolve such conflicts.) Although we encourage advance notice from 
attachers to utilities for larger orders as early in the process as 
possible, we find that a minimum of 15 days is needed for the utility 
to begin planning for how to process Mid-Sized Orders associated with a 
single network deployment, and a minimum of 60 days is needed for Large 
Orders, which present more complications that the parties will need to 
iron out in the ensuing meet-and-confer. (Utilities generally agree 
that 60 days is the minimum amount of time needed for an advance notice 
of Large Orders. We find that 60 days' advance notice for Large Orders 
strikes the right balance between giving the utility enough time to 
begin planning for the new project and the time at which an attacher's 
plans become more concrete and less likely to change. We also find that 
the advance notice for Mid-Sized Orders associated with a single 
network deployment should be shorter than the notice for Large Orders, 
as such orders are smaller and presumably easier to process.) It also 
will require responsiveness on the part of utilities, which attachers 
assert is often not forthcoming. We expect that this requirement will 
foster a more collaborative approach to the pole attachment process and 
increase efficiency and planning in processing larger orders, resulting 
in speedier broadband deployment.
    18. We reject utilities' request that if an attacher fails to 
comply with the advance notice requirement, then it forfeits the right 
to have its application processed under the Mid-Sized and Large Order 
timelines and instead will have to negotiate timelines for their 
application in good faith with the utility. We find that such a penalty 
is too onerous. The impact of failure to comply with the advance notice 
requirement is readily ameliorated by utilities' ability to deem the 
associated application to constitute the attacher's advance notice, 
still requiring the parties to meet and confer (as described below) 
within the specified period of time after a Large Order is filed, and 
tolling for the length of the advance notice period the applicable pole 
attachment timeline, which includes the time the utility has to review 
the associated application for completeness and begin its review on the 
merits.
    19. To further enhance collaboration between the parties, we 
require attachers and utilities to meet and confer within 30 days after 
written advance notice is given to negotiate in good faith the 
mechanics and timing by which Large Orders will be processed. We 
encourage the parties to discuss and plan, among other things, the 
utility's ability to meet deadlines for an order, the availability of 
contractors (particularly the need for, and availability of, electric 
space contractors to the extent necessary), a prioritization of the 
poles to be worked on, the status of local permitting efforts, and 
estimated timelines for the work. We also require that the parties find 
a mutually agreeable day and time for the meeting (which can be in-
person, virtual, or by phone), and to conduct the meeting, within the 
30-day period after the attacher sends written advance notice.

[[Page 41731]]

Any allegations of bad faith by either party in fulfilling this 
requirement can be referred to the RBAT for resolution. We agree with 
utilities that such a pre-planning requirement will ``enable utilities 
and attaching entities to prepare for larger orders or better yet avoid 
the need to submit larger orders altogether and instead submit 
applications in stages.'' (UTC in particular supports the idea that 
``processing applications incrementally is more efficient and enables 
utilities to process as many applications as quickly as possible and 
avoids the situation where if there is a hold-up with one application, 
then the attachers' entire project is held up'' and that a pre-planning 
requirement will enable the parties ``to prioritize the work 
appropriately so that resources can be allocated and projects can be 
completed as efficiently as possible with the resources that are 
available.'')

B. Large Orders

    20. While we do not change the existing timelines for processing 
pole attachment applications for Regular Orders and Mid-Sized Orders, 
(The pole attachment deadlines for all four phases of the pole 
attachment process apply to all requests for Regular Orders. Utilities 
currently get an extra 15 days for the survey process and an extra 45 
days for the make-ready process for Mid-Sized Orders. There currently 
are no required timelines for the processing of orders exceeding the 
lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of a utility's poles in a state; 
rather, the current rules require the parties to negotiate such 
timelines in good faith. Note also that attachers have the right to 
engage in self-help for surveys and make-ready work if utilities fail 
to complete those items by the deadlines established in our rules.) we 
agree with attachers that fixed timelines are necessary for some level 
of pole attachment applications above 3,000 poles (or 5 percent of a 
utility's poles in a state). Presently, our rules require attachers and 
utilities to negotiate in good faith the timelines for such 
applications, but today we shift away from an uncertain negotiation 
method and adopt a new level of defined timelines for processing 
applications exceeding the lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of a 
utility's poles in a state, up to the lesser of 6,000 poles or 10 
percent of a utility's poles in a state. We define this grouping as 
Large Orders, and the timelines we adopt are as follows:

                          Large Order Timeline
------------------------------------------------------------------------
           Pole access phase                   Time for completion
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application Completeness Review........  10 business days after receipt.
OTMR Application Review................  10 business days for
                                          completeness, 45 days on the
                                          merits after application is
                                          complete.
Survey/Review on Merits................  90 days after application is
                                          complete.
Estimate...............................  29 days after survey.
Communications Space Make-Ready........  120 days after attacher
                                          payment.
Above Communications Space Make-Ready    180 days after attacher
 (Power space).                           payment.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    For orders that exceed the lesser of 6,000 poles or 10 percent of a 
utility's poles in a state (Very Large Orders), we leave in place the 
requirement that utilities and attachers negotiate in good faith the 
pole attachment timelines for such orders. However, consistent with the 
Commission's clarification in the Declaratory Ruling, the lesser of the 
first 6,000 poles (or 10 percent of the utility's poles in the state) 
of that application are subject to the new make-ready timelines that we 
adopt today for Large Orders, so long as the attacher designates in its 
application the first 6,000 poles (or 10 percent of the utility's poles 
in the state) to be processed, which the utility must permit the 
attacher to do.
    21. We adopt the 6,000 pole cap for the expanded timeline for Large 
Orders after consideration of comments from parties on both sides of 
the equation. In particular, we agree with NCTA's judgment that ``[i]n 
NCTA members' experience, the cap should not be less than 6,000 poles 
or 10% of the utilities' poles in the state to correspond with NCTA 
members' collective experience to date deploying funded broadband 
projects.'' Dominion/Xcel also advocate for a 6,000 pole cap on the 
next level of applications subject to a timeline, while noting that 
their ultimate preference is for the Commission to refrain from 
adopting a timeline for orders over 3,000 poles.
    22. We agree with attacher commenters that an additional defined 
timeline layer is needed to process these Large Orders. As NCTA 
asserts, having defined timelines only for applications up to 3,000 
poles, and requiring attachers to negotiate the timing of applications 
exceeding this threshold, fails to provide the required certainty and 
expediency necessary to meet critical broadband buildout needs and 
requirements. As the Commission noted when it first adopted timelines 
to govern the pole attachment process, ``in the absence of a timeline, 
pole attachments may be subject to excessive delays.'' Since that time, 
when the Commission established a good-faith negotiation solution for 
the processing of orders exceeding the lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 
percent of a utility's poles in a state, circumstances have changed, 
with an established nationwide priority on broadband deployment and the 
need for communications attachers to move quickly to achieve the needed 
buildouts.
    23. Utilities' opposition to an additional layer of defined 
timelines for Large Orders centers on the desire for flexibility, 
especially with regard to the allocation of contractor resources for 
pole attachment work; as USTelecom notes, no utility can ``escape the 
realities of workforce shortages, staffing issues, permitting delays, 
supply chain difficulties, and the need to divert resources to address 
storms or other emergencies, which can add time to a deployment 
project.'' While we recognize these realities and the benefits of 
flexibility, we address utilities' concerns by adopting the advance 
notice and meet-and-confer requirements that will jump start the pole 
attachment process for Large Orders earlier than under our current 
rules, a requirement that utilities have identified as crucial to 
adopting timelines for Large Orders. With additional planning added to 
the process on the front end (especially with regard to planning for 
contractor resources), and given the over-arching need of 
communications attachers to deploy broadband as quickly as possible, we 
find that a defined pole attachment timeline for Large Orders will 
greatly facilitate the pole attachment process. And we agree that in 
adopting new timelines for Large Orders, ``the parties will remain free 
to negotiate alternative solutions.''
    24. Timelines for Large Orders. We find that the new timelines for 
Large Orders strike a balance between a utility's need for sufficient 
time to

[[Page 41732]]

process such orders and an attacher's need for a quicker pole 
attachment process in order to meet buildout deadlines. For ease of 
reference, the pole attachment timelines for all sizes of orders will 
now be as follows:

                                            Pole Attachment Timelines
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Pole access phase                Regular orders           Mid-sized orders            Large orders
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application Completeness Review..  10 business days.........  10 business days........  10 business days.
OTMR Application Review..........  10 business days for       10 business days for      10 business days for
                                    completeness, 15 days on   completeness, 30 days     completeness, 45 days
                                    the merits after           on the merits after       on the merits after
                                    application is complete.   application is complete.  application is
                                                                                         complete.
Survey/Review on Merits..........  45 days after application  60 days after             90 days after
                                    is complete.               application is complete.  application is
                                                                                         complete.
Estimate.........................  14 days after survey.....  14 days after survey....  29 days after survey.
Communications Space Make-Ready..  30 days after attacher     75 days after attacher    120 days after attacher
                                    payment.                   payment.                  payment.
Above Comms Make-Ready (Electric   90 days after attacher     135 days after attacher   180 days after attacher
 Space).                            payment.                   payment.                  payment.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    25. While we adopt the Commission's proposal in the Third Further 
Notice to add 90 days to the make-ready timelines for Large Orders, 
(The proposed additional 90 days for make-ready were in addition to the 
make-ready deadlines for Regular Orders (i.e., 30 days for 
communications space make-ready and 90 days for make-ready above the 
communications space).) we also find it necessary to adopt longer 
timelines for other stages of the pole attachment process, not just the 
make-ready phase. As a result, we add incremental days for the 
application review, survey, and estimate phases of the pole attachment 
process for Large Orders in recognition of utilities' concerns that as 
pole attachment orders become larger, they become more complex and thus 
require even more time to complete. The new timelines we adopt for 
Large Orders are the same as those proposed by NCTA, but are shorter 
than the Large Order timelines proposed by USTelecom (USTelecom 
proposes incremental timelines for each 300-pole batch over 3,000 poles 
in an order, which would be added to the timelines for Regular Orders: 
(1) Review of Application for Completeness--for each increment of 300 
poles over 3,000 poles, the utility has 10 additional business days to 
determine whether an application is complete; (2) Survey/Application 
review on the merits--for each increment of 300 poles over 3,000 poles, 
the utility has 45 additional days to decide whether to grant a 
complete application and to complete any surveys; (3) Estimate--for 
each increment of 300 poles over 3,000 poles, the utility has 14 
additional days to provide an estimate of make-ready charges; (4) 
Attacher acceptance--for each increment of 300 poles over 3,000 poles, 
the attacher has 14 additional days, or until withdrawal of the 
estimate by the utility, whichever is later, to approve the estimate 
and provide payment; (5) Make-ready for attachments in the 
communications space--for each increment of 300 poles over 3,000 poles, 
there are 30 additional days to complete make-ready work for 
attachments in the communications space; and (6) Make-ready for 
attachments above the communications space--for each increment of 300 
poles over 3,000 poles, there are 90 additional days to complete make-
ready work for attachments above the communications space, and a 
utility may take an additional 15 days to complete the make-ready.) and 
Dominion/Xcel Energy, (We note that Dominion/Xcel generally are opposed 
to additional pole attachment timelines for Large Orders, but are 
proposing timelines in the alternative ``if the Commission is compelled 
to reach this result.'' Dominion/Xcel also caveat that their proposed 
timeline should be limited to broadband projects funded by government 
programs and expressly conditioned on their proposed notice 
requirement. The Dominion/Xcel timeline for Large Orders would provide: 
(1) 30 days for application completeness review; (2) 75 days for OTMR 
application review; (3) survey/application review on the merits 150 
days after application is complete; (4) estimate due 30 days after the 
survey is completed; (5) communications space make-ready within 165 
days after attacher payment; and (6) make-ready work above the 
communication space within 285 days after attacher payment.) which we 
find are too lengthy to help attachers efficiently meet broadband 
buildout deadlines. For example, the proposed Dominion/Xcel timelines 
would extend the total make-ready time period to over five months for 
utilities and existing attachers to complete make-ready work for 
attachments in the communications space and to over nine months for 
utilities to complete work for attachments above the communications 
space. Given that make-ready timelines follow several months already 
afforded to utilities by the Commission's rules for assessing the 
completeness of applications, deciding the merits of an application, 
performing surveys, and providing make-ready estimates, adding an 
additional 5-7 months for make-ready would extend the pole attachment 
process to almost a year, thereby unnecessarily delaying the process. 
While some utility commenters oppose the Commission's proposal for 
additional make-ready time for Large Orders, we conclude that the 90-
day increase in the make-ready deadlines for Large Orders strikes a 
balance between getting attachers onto poles faster while still making 
it more likely that a utility will be able to meet our pole attachment 
timelines. The new timelines we adopt today would mean that Large 
Orders would be processed more slowly than if an applicant broke the 
requests up into two smaller applications and submitted them separately 
a month apart. As a result, attachers will have an incentive to submit 
smaller orders that allow utilities to better manage their workflows 
and contractors and thus complete applications in a timely manner.
    26. To the extent utilities need additional time for make-ready 
work, we note that the Commission's rules allow for deviations to the 
make-ready deadlines ``for good and sufficient cause that renders it 
infeasible for the utility to complete make-ready within the time 
limits specified in this section.'' (While utilities are concerned 
about the increased complexities associated with

[[Page 41733]]

increasingly larger orders and the inability to predict what might 
arise in the course of the work related to these orders, the advance 
notice and meet-and-confer requirements will go a long way toward 
obviating these concerns.) USTelecom requests that we provide 
additional examples of what constitutes ``good and sufficient cause'' 
for deviations to the make-ready timelines, but we decline to do so at 
this time. Our rules currently provide that a utility may deviate from 
the make-ready timeline ``for good and sufficient cause that renders it 
infeasible for the utility to complete make-ready within the 
[specified] time limits.'' (When so deviating, the utility must 
``immediately notify, in writing, the new attacher and affected 
existing attachers,'' and identify the affected poles and provide a 
detailed explanation of the reason for the deviation and a new 
completion date.'' The utility shall deviate from the time limits 
specified in this section for a period no longer than necessary to 
complete make-ready on the affected poles and shall resume make-ready 
without discrimination when it returns to routine operations. A utility 
cannot delay completion of make-ready because of a preexisting 
violation on an affected pole not caused by the new attacher.'') In 
interpreting this provision, the Commission in 2011 stated that 
``utilities may toll the timeline to cope with an emergency that 
requires federal disaster relief, but may not stop the clock for 
routine or foreseeable events such as repairing damage caused by 
routine seasonal storms; repositioning existing attachments; bringing 
poles up to code; alleged lack of resources; or awaiting resolution of 
regulatory proceedings, such as a state public utilities commission 
rulemaking, that affect pole attachments. Aside from these examples of 
very serious occurrences that impede make-ready on the one hand, and 
routine events that do not justify tolling the timeline on the other 
hand, a utility must exercise its judgment in invoking a clock stoppage 
in the context of its general duty to provide timely and 
nondiscriminatory access.'' We find that this previous guidance on what 
constitutes ``good and sufficient cause'' under our rules affords 
sufficient flexibility while still providing the certainty and 
expediency needed to ensure timely broadband buildouts.
    27. While our overall approach provides for shorter timelines than 
utilities might otherwise prefer, the advance notice and meet-and-
confer requirements that we adopt today should obviate any attendant 
concerns and help both sides set more realistic expectations. For 
example, USTelecom advocates for the status quo regarding the pole 
attachment timelines for Large Orders, stating that ``[n]egotiated 
timelines let companies anticipate the challenges that will likely 
arise in a project, discuss potential solutions or workarounds, and 
tailor a realistic timeline that accounts for them.'' However, the 
status quo results in delay because timeline negotiations do not even 
begin until after a Large Order is filed. Under the approach we adopt 
today, attachers are required to provide utilities with advance notice, 
and attachers and utilities then must meet and confer before a Large 
Order is submitted, thereby capturing the efficiencies identified by 
USTelecom much earlier in the pole attachment process.
    28. The advance notice and meet-and-confer requirements also will 
help utilities when multiple attachers submit applications in the same 
timeframe. As Dominion/Xcel identifies the problem, it is hard to 
manage utility resources ``to the extent that sudden upticks in its 
workload arise from multiple modest-sized orders, submitted 
simultaneously by multiple attachers.'' But, as Dominion/Xcel note, 
``[t]o ensure that adequate resources are available to process 
applications submitted in connection with massive deployments, DEV 
[already] requests that attachers provide prior notice of expanded 
orders as soon as the details of such orders are known--and some 
attachers honor this request.'' As we now mandate advance notice and 
meet-and-confer requirements before the submission of Large Orders, 
utilities and attachers can work out beforehand any resource problems 
caused by multiple such orders being submitted by different attachers 
around the same time.
    29. Negotiated Timelines for Very Large Orders. We agree with NCTA 
that the parties should engage in good faith negotiations for the 
timelines applicable to Very Large Orders, which we have defined as 
orders exceeding the lesser of 6,000 poles or 10 percent of a utility's 
poles in a state. While ACA Connects argues for established timelines 
for Very Large Orders, we find NCTA's position to be a reasonable 
accommodation between utilities and attachers for dealing with orders 
of that size. We reject NCTA's request that, if the utility fails to 
establish a reasonable timeline for Very Large Orders, the timeline for 
Large Orders will then govern. We find that there may be reasons beyond 
the utility's control, including the possible failure of attachers to 
agree to a reasonable timeline, that may prevent the establishment of a 
timeline for Very Large Orders.

C. Improvements to the Pole Attachment Timeline

    30. Utility and existing attacher notification requirement to 
enable quicker self-help for surveys and make-ready. We require 
utilities to notify new attachers within 15 days of receipt of a 
complete application if they know or reasonably should know that they 
cannot meet the survey timelines. We further require utilities to 
notify new attachers as soon as practicable but no later than 15 days 
after payment of the estimate if they know or reasonably should know 
that they cannot meet the make-ready timelines. (We disagree with NCTA 
that the 15-day make-ready notification deadline should begin on 
completion of the survey. As USTelecom points out, at completion of the 
survey, ``utilities will lack insight into several relevant facts . . . 
including when the make-ready period will begin (something that depends 
on when the attacher pays a make-ready estimate) and whether third-
party attachers will comply with deadlines for moving their attachments 
(something that occurs during the make-ready period).'') Similarly, 
existing attachers shall notify the utility and the new attacher as 
soon as practicable but no later than 15 days after receiving notice 
from the utility pursuant to Sec.  1.1411(e) of our rules that the 
existing attacher knows or reasonably should know that it cannot meet 
the make-ready deadline. Existing attachers giving such notice also 
must notify the utility of their inability to meet the make-ready 
deadline, and we note that existing attachers already receive notice of 
payment of the estimate when the utility sends them make-ready letters 
pursuant to Sec.  1.1411(e). Where a utility or existing attacher 
notifies the new attacher that it is unable to meet the survey or make-
ready timelines, the new attacher may then elect self-help for the work 
that the notifying party cannot do pursuant to Sec.  1.1411(i)(1) (for 
surveys) or Sec.  1.1411(i)(3) (for make-ready) of our rules upon 
receipt of the notice rather than having to wait until the relevant 
timeline period runs. However, if either a utility or an existing 
attacher does not give advance notice to the new attacher that it will 
be unable to meet the survey or make-ready deadlines, then the new 
attacher must wait until the end of the survey or make-ready timelines 
in our rules before availing itself of any self-help remedies for that 
party's work. Attachers can submit to the RBAT any allegations that the 
utility or existing attachers knew or reasonably should

[[Page 41734]]

have known that the survey or make-ready work could not be completed on 
time and advance notice was not timely given.
    31. In the Third Further Notice, the Commission sought comment on 
NCTA's proposal ``that the utility notify an attacher 15 days after 
receiving a complete application that it cannot conduct the survey 
within the required 45-day period so that the attacher can elect self-
help for the survey sooner.'' Specifically, the Commission asked 
whether utilities can ``feasibly be required to inform attachers within 
15 business days of receiving a completed application that they will be 
unable to conduct a survey, estimate, or make-ready within the required 
time period.'' While utilities argue that it is not feasible for them 
to determine whether they can meet the survey or the make-ready 
deadlines so soon after their timetable begins, attachers assert that 
utilities ``generally know immediately upon reviewing an application 
whether they will be able to facilitate the pole access process in a 
timely manner'' and that such advance notice is key to speeding up the 
pole attachment process because they can then invoke the self-help 
option sooner.
    32. We agree with Altice that the Commission has recognized the 
importance ``for attachers to receive swift access to utility poles so 
that they can efficiently deploy networks in new markets. To achieve 
this goal, early communication is essential, particularly with respect 
to whether utilities will be able to process applications within the 
Commission's established timeframes.'' As Crown Castle notes, ``[t]his 
change will be productive for utilities because it will allow them to 
dispense with surveys that they will not be able to complete, and it 
benefits attachers by accelerating their access to the pole.'' By the 
same token, we take heed of the fact that utilities may not know within 
15 days of receipt of a complete application whether they will be able 
to meet the make-ready deadline. While the advance notice and Large 
Order meet-and-confer requirements will help utilities and attachers 
level-set expectations for potential Mid-Sized Orders associated with a 
single network deployment and Large Orders, certain factors remain 
outside the utilities' control, including the timing of the new 
attacher obtaining required local permits and third-party attachers' 
compliance with the deadlines for moving their attachments to make room 
for the new attachers' equipment. We thus have tied that notice 
obligation to a later point in the process where utilities will have 
greater certainty regarding their ability to meet the make-ready 
deadline and have qualified the two separate notification requirements 
based on whether the utility knows or should know that it cannot meet 
the deadlines. We also extend the 15-day notice requirement to existing 
attachers who play a key role in the make-ready process. As UTC notes, 
``existing attachers on the pole may not be able to meet the make-ready 
timelines, which in turn will also affect the ability of the utility to 
meet the make-ready timelines.''
    33. With these changes to the proposed action, the advance notice 
and Large Order meet-and-confer requirements should help obviate the 
utilities' concerns that 15 days may be too short to give notice of 
being unable to meet the survey and make-ready deadlines, as the pre-
planning and coordination that now will occur should give utilities 
earlier insight into the scope of a project and the viability of the 
associated deadlines. We also note that in utilities' experience, the 
self-help remedy is rarely, if ever, used, but we want to provide 
attachers with access to the tools they need to deploy broadband 
quickly and cheaply.
    34. We reject Altice's proposal requiring utilities that miss the 
survey and make-ready timelines to refund attachers for any pre-paid 
and uncompleted survey and/or make-ready work within 30 days of missing 
the 15-day notice deadline, with interest dating back to the date the 
pre-payment was made. Altice's proposed remedy could penalize the 
utility for missed deadlines that may be beyond the control of the 
utility, especially when make-ready is dependent on existing attachers 
moving their equipment. In addition, the parties already have a true-up 
mechanism, usually in their pole attachment agreements, for the refund 
of any sums paid for work that ultimately is not done.
    35. Self-help for the estimate phase. In order to further improve 
the pole attachment timeline, we adopt a self-help remedy for make-
ready estimates where the utility is unable to meet the estimate 
timelines, provided there are certain safeguards as proposed by utility 
commenters. Currently in our rules, utilities have 14 days after giving 
notice of granting the new attacher's complete application or receiving 
the new attacher's self-help survey to complete an estimate of make-
ready costs and present the estimate to the attacher. (``Where a new 
attacher's request for access is not denied, a utility shall present to 
a new attacher a detailed, itemized estimate, on a pole-by-pole basis 
where requested, of charges to perform all necessary make-ready within 
14 days of providing the response required by paragraph (c) of this 
section, or in the case where a new attacher has performed a survey, 
within 14 days of receipt by the utility of such survey.'') Although 
note that herein we have adopted a 29-day period for the estimate phase 
for Large Orders. A utility may withdraw the estimate beginning 14 days 
after it is presented if the attacher has not yet accepted that 
estimate, and the new attacher may accept the estimate and make payment 
any time after receiving it unless it has been withdrawn. However, 
unlike for surveys and make-ready work, there currently is no self-help 
remedy for attachers if utilities miss the deadline to present the 
estimate of make-ready costs. In the Third Further Notice, the 
Commission sought comment on NCTA's proposal to make self-help 
available for the estimate process. In the ensuing record, both 
utilities and attachers supported this concept as a way to speed the 
pole attachment process and ensure broadband projects do not get stuck 
at the estimate phase.
    36. To respond to the concerns articulated by some utility 
commenters, we adopt certain safeguards for a self-help remedy in the 
estimate context. Specifically: (1) the attacher must wait until the 
utility's 14-day estimate deadline (or 29 days in the case of Large 
Orders) has expired before exercising the self-help remedy; (2) the 
attacher must provide notice that it is exercising its self-help remedy 
for an estimate; (3) the self-help estimate is to be performed by an 
approved contractor in accordance with Sec.  1.1412(a) and (b) of our 
rules; (4) this remedy is not available for pole replacements; and (5) 
utilities have the right to review and approve the estimates at the 
attacher's expense, but such expenses must be reasonable and based on 
only the actual costs incurred by the utility in reviewing the 
estimate. We agree with commenters that new attachers should be able to 
use utility-approved contractors to perform self-help estimates for 
make-ready work above the communications space because ``[w]ithout 
having the estimate for electric space make-ready, the estimate for 
communications space make-ready is of little practical use. Make-ready 
in both the communications and power spaces is necessary to allow 
attachment to a pole.'' For self-help make-ready estimates above the 
communications space, the new attacher must use a utility-approved 
contractor pursuant to Sec.  1.1412(a) of our rules, and we note that 
the utility's ability to refuse

[[Page 41735]]

acceptance of the attacher's estimate obviates any concern over the 
accuracy of any potential make-ready estimates for work above the 
communications space.
    37. In addition, we adopt a requirement that utilities make a 
written decision on a self-help estimate within 14 days of receipt or 
before it is withdrawn by the attacher, whichever is later, noting that 
this is the same amount of time that a new attacher has to accept an 
estimate from the utility before the utility has the option to withdraw 
the estimate. If the estimate is accepted by the utility, then it is 
subject to the reconciliation process set forth in Sec.  1.1411(d)(3) 
of our rules. If the estimate is not accepted by the utility, then the 
utility must detail in writing the reasons for non-acceptance. The 
attacher then can submit a revised estimate to the utility without 
restarting the pole attachment timeline. If the self-help process does 
not result in an accepted estimate, then the attacher can resort to the 
RBAT to have the utility generate an estimate pursuant to Sec.  
1.1411(d) of our rules.
    38. Utility limits on the size or frequency of pole attachment 
applications. While we agree with USTelecom that reasonable application 
processing requirements provide benefits to utilities and attachers, we 
prohibit utilities from imposing application size limits in combination 
with application frequency limits that have the practical effect of 
restricting the number of pole attachments attachers may seek in a 
given timeframe. In determining the applicable pole attachment 
timelines for Regular, Mid-Sized, Large, and Very Large Orders, 
utilities have the ability to ``treat multiple requests from a single 
new attacher as one request when the requests are filed within 30 days 
of one another.'' However, the Commission noted in the Third Further 
Notice the concern raised by NCTA that utilities may ``limit[ ] `the 
size of an application or the number of poles included in an 
application so as to avoid the timelines.' '' More specifically, NCTA 
noted that even though the rules contemplate attachers filing and 
utilities considering large orders, various utilities have imposed 
limits on application size and frequency that may prevent attachers 
from applying for the attachments they need within the timeframes in 
the Commission's rules.
    39. When the Commission first adopted pole attachment timelines in 
2011, it addressed utilities' desire for flexibility by creating three 
size-categories of applications and allowing utilities to ``treat 
multiple in-state requests from a single attacher during a 30-day 
period as one request.'' While the subsequent record shows that 
utilities use application size and frequency limits to effectively 
manage application workflow, we want to ensure that such limits do not 
have the effect, whether intended or not, of restricting the number of 
pole attachments attachers may seek in a given 30-day period. Utilities 
still are able to accumulate together all orders received from an 
attacher within a 30-day period in order to determine the correct 
timeline for processing the combined orders, but those applications 
must be processed in accordance with our rules. (As the Commission 
clarified in the Declaratory Ruling, ``when an application is submitted 
requesting access to the larger of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of a 
utility's poles in the state, the lesser of the first 3,000 poles or 5 
percent of the utility's poles in the state of that application are 
subject to the make-ready timeline set forth in Sec.  1.1411(g)(3), 
which gives utilities 45 additional days beyond the standard make-ready 
timeline to process attachment applications, so long as the attacher 
designates in its application the first 3,000 poles (or 5 percent of 
the utility's poles in the state) to be processed, which the utility 
must permit the attacher to do.'') For example, if an attacher has a 
3,500 pole project, the utility cannot impose limits on the size and 
frequency of the attacher's pole attachment application(s) that would 
prevent the attacher from submitting a 3,500 pole order in a 30-day 
period. While the utility can limit the size of a pole attachment 
application and can treat all applications filed by the attacher in a 
30-day period as one application, the limits cannot have the effect of 
preventing the attacher from applying to access 3,500 poles in a 30-day 
period (although the utility can process the application(s) under the 
Large Order timeline). We agree with Crown Castle that ``attachers 
should be allowed to file applications that make sense for their 
deployment plan, particularly for deployments under RDOF, BEAD, or 
other programs.'' Indeed, some utilities already adhere to this rule, 
thus demonstrating that it is reasonable. For example, Dominion Energy 
and Xcel Energy explain they ``follow administrative policies that 
prescribe a maximum number of poles per application, but also permit an 
attacher to submit an unlimited number of applications at its 
discretion.''

D. Deadline for Utilities To Respond to Requests To Add Contractors to 
Utility Lists

    40. We amend Sec.  1.1412 of the Commission's rules to establish a 
firm deadline by which utilities must respond to requests by attachers 
to add additional qualified contractors to their existing lists. 
Specifically, we require utilities to respond to such requests within 
30 days of receipt by the utility. The response must state whether the 
proposed contractor meets the requirements in Sec.  1.1412(c) of the 
Commission's rules and will be added to the utility's approved list of 
contractors following the completion of the utility's on-boarding 
process. (We seek comment in the Further Notice below on contractor on-
boarding processes, the time required to complete such processes, and 
whether the Commission should adopt a deadline for the completion of 
that process.) If a utility fails to respond to an attacher's request 
to add a proposed contractor to its approved list within 30 days of 
receipt, the attacher's request will be deemed approved.
    41. In the Third Further Notice, the Commission sought comment on 
whether it should modify the self-help rules to enable attachers to 
access poles more quickly. The self-help remedy allows attachers to 
perform surveys and make-ready work using utility-approved contractors. 
(Note that in this item, the Commission is extending the self-help 
remedy to the estimate phase as well.) For surveys and make-ready work 
that is complex or above the communications space, a utility must make 
available and keep up-to-date a reasonably sufficient list of 
contractors that it has authorized to perform such work on its poles. A 
new attacher engaging in self-help for complex or above the 
communications space make-ready must use a contractor from this list to 
perform the work. Attachers may, however, request that additional 
contractors meeting the minimum requirements of the Commission's rules 
be added to the utility-approved list, and utilities may not 
unreasonably withhold their consent. For surveys and make-ready work 
that is simple, utilities may--but are not required to--provide a 
reasonably sufficient list of contractors they authorize to perform 
such work. If a utility provides such a list, attachers must use a 
contractor from that list. Attachers may request that utilities add 
contractors that meet the minimum qualifications of the Commission's 
rules to their lists, and utilities may not unreasonably withhold their 
consent. (If a utility does not provide a list of

[[Page 41736]]

approved contractors for self-help surveys and make-ready that is 
simple, or none of the contractors on the utility-approved list are 
available within a reasonable time, attachers may retain their own 
contractors that meet the minimum qualifications of the Commission's 
rules to perform the work.) To be reasonable, a decision to withhold 
consent ``must be prompt, set forth in writing that describes the basis 
for rejection, nondiscriminatory, and based on fair application of 
commercially reasonable requirements for contractors relating to issues 
of safety or reliability.''
    42. Some attachers contend that certain utilities may not be 
promptly responding to attacher requests to add additional qualified 
contractors. They state that utilities take months to respond to such 
requests, if they respond at all. Indeed, NCTA states that it took one 
of its members 6 to 8 months to qualify just one contractor with a 
utility. Attachers argue that these delays are not due to a shortage of 
qualified contractors for utilities to approve. Rather, NCTA asserts 
that the ``utility approval process isn't working,'' and Crown Castle 
notes that it has identified qualified contractors but has been 
``unable to use them because the utility fails or refuses to approve 
the proposed contractor within a reasonable timeframe.'' Accordingly, 
attachers argue that utilities should be given a firm deadline to 
respond to attacher requests to add additional contractors to their 
approved lists to prevent untimely responses from delaying broadband 
deployments. Specifically, attachers have asked that the Commission 
require utilities to respond to such requests within either 21 or 30 
days of the submission of the request. They further request that if 
utilities do not respond to the attacher's request by the deadline, 
that the attacher's request be deemed approved. NCTA argues that, 
``[a]bsent such a remedy, utilities will continue to lack any incentive 
to comply, forcing attachers to file complaints just to enforce bright-
line rules.''
    43. The Commission authorized attachers to request that additional 
qualified contractors be added to utility-approved lists ``to prevent 
the utility list from being a choke-point that prevents deployment.'' 
We conclude that failing to respond to an attacher's request to add an 
additional contractor for months creates such a choke-point and failing 
to respond at all certainly does. Indeed, we find that the Commission's 
prior direction that decisions to withhold consent be ``prompt'' means 
that utilities may not simply hold requests in abeyance without 
providing a response at all. (We, thus, disagree with USTelecom that 
there is no need for the Commission to establish a deadline to respond 
to attacher requests to add additional qualifications because the 
Commission has already stated that such responses must be ``prompt.'') 
To conclude otherwise would defeat the purpose of allowing attachers to 
request that qualified contractors be added to utility-approved lists.
    44. Thus, we amend Sec.  1.1412 of the Commission's rules to 
require that utilities respond to any request by an attacher to add an 
additional contractor to a utility-approved list within 30 days of 
receipt of the request. (Because attachers currently have a remedy to 
retain their own contractors if a utility does not maintain an approved 
list of contractors for self-help surveys and make-ready that is 
simple, the deadline that we adopt today is particularly important for 
requests to add contractors to utility-approved lists for self-help 
surveys and make-ready that is complex or above-the communications 
space. We, thus, decline to limit the deadline to contractors that 
would perform work that is in the communications space, as some 
utilities have requested. We also decline the Electric Utilities' 
request that we revise Sec.  1.1412(a) and (b) of our rules to apply to 
self-help work above and below the communications space, respectively, 
rather than to self-help work that is complex and above the 
communications space and self-help work that is simple, respectively.) 
The response must state whether the proposed contractor has been 
approved based on the requirements in Sec.  1.1412(c) of the 
Commission's rules and will be on-boarded by the utility to work on its 
poles, after which the contractor will be added to the utility's 
approved list. We find that 30 days is enough time for utilities to 
evaluate whether a proposed contractor meets the minimum qualification 
requirements of the Commission's rules based on the information 
submitted by the attacher and to provide the response described above. 
To ensure swift compliance with this deadline by utilities, we require 
that requests to add attachers to utility-approved lists be deemed 
approved if a utility fails to respond to such requests by the 30-day 
deadline, and that the utility promptly on-board the contractor as 
necessary to commence work on the utility's poles. (Notwithstanding 
statements from utilities that contractors working on their poles must 
execute agreements with utilities, NCTA asserts that ``it is the 
attaching entity, not the utility, that is responsible for contracting 
with and onboarding the contractor and for the tasks the Electric 
Utilities identify as most time consuming.'' We find that the 
information in the record is insufficient for the Commission to 
determine the exact steps that must be taken to onboard a contractor to 
work on a utility's poles, how long those steps should take, and who 
the parties responsible for completing those steps are or should be. As 
stated above, we seek comment on these points in the Further Notice.) 
We find that a deemed approved remedy is appropriate to enable 
attachers to make meaningful use of the self-help remedy to timely 
complete their deployments when survey, estimate, and make-ready 
deadlines under our rules have been missed.
    45. Some utilities argue that the Commission should not adopt a 
deadline to approve or deny requests to add additional contractors to 
their lists because it can take three months to a year or more to on-
board contractors to perform surveys and make-ready work. We are not 
persuaded by this argument. We agree with NCTA that the process of 
approving the addition of a contractor that meets the requirements of 
Sec.  1.1412(c) of the Commission's rules is distinct from the ``on-
boarding'' requirements described by utilities, such as negotiating an 
agreement with the new contractor, providing employees of the new 
contractor with access to the utility's internal systems, and training. 
Section 1.1412(c) requires the proposed contractor to: (1) agree to 
follow published safety and operational guidelines of the utility, if 
available, but if not, to follow National Electrical Safety Code 
guidelines; (2) acknowledge that it knows how to read and follow 
licensed-engineered pole designs for make-ready, if required by the 
utility; (3) agree to follow all local, state, and federal laws and 
regulations including, but not limited to, requirements regarding 
Qualified and Competent Persons under the Occupational and Safety 
Health Administration rules; (4) agree to meet or exceed any uniformly 
applied and reasonable safety and reliability thresholds set by the 
utility, if made available; and (5) demonstrate that it is adequately 
insured or will establish an adequate performance bond for the make-
ready it will perform, including work it will perform on facilities 
owned by existing attachers. (Dominion/Xcel suggests that the minimum 
qualification requirements in Sec.  1.1412(c) of the Commission's rules 
are not sufficient as applied to contractors that perform complex or

[[Page 41737]]

above the communications space make-ready work. The Commission decided 
otherwise when it authorized attachers to request that utilities add 
``any contractor that meets the minimum qualifications in paragraphs 
(c)(1) through (5) of this section'' to their lists of contractors 
authorized to perform self-help surveys and make-ready that is above 
the communications space and complex, and stated that utilities may not 
unreasonably withhold their consent. In so doing, the Commission did 
not ``mandate specific qualification requirements for third-party 
cont[r]actors that perform work on or in the vicinity of electric power 
facilities . . . .'' To the contrary, Sec.  1.1412(c) of the 
Commission's rules requires contractors to agree to ``follow published 
safety and operational guidelines of a utility, if available'' and ``to 
meet or exceed any uniformly applied and reasonable safety and 
reliability thresholds set by the utility, if made available.'' The 
Commission's rules thus require compliance with any such reasonable, 
nondiscriminatory requirements as-set by the utility for work that is 
complex and above the communications space.) We find it is reasonable 
to assume that a utility could review information submitted to 
demonstrate a proposed contractor's agreement to these requirements and 
issue a decision within 30 days that either approves the contractor 
contingent on completion of the utility's on-boarding process or denies 
the contractor based on the sufficiency of that information.
    46. Some utilities argue that allowing a ``deemed approved'' remedy 
if utilities miss this deadline will necessarily create safety concerns 
for workers and the public and risk the reliability of electric 
distribution systems. We disagree. As an initial matter, we do not 
believe it will be difficult for utilities to avoid a deemed approved 
result by simply complying with the deadline. The response we require 
merely requires the utilities to review information submitted by 
attachers to determine if the proposed contractor has made the 
representations required by Sec.  1.1412(c) of the Commission's rules. 
We acknowledge that utilities thereafter may need to take steps to on-
board and train the contractors to perform work on their poles, and 
that the contractor will not be added to the utility's approved list 
until that process is complete. In recognition of potential safety 
concerns associated with work in the supply space, that process may 
differ in certain respects for contractors that will conduct work above 
the communications space as compared to contractors that will be 
working in the communications space. But, the first step is to approve 
or deny the contractor based on the requirements of Sec.  1.1412(c) of 
the Commission's rules within 30 days of receiving a request from an 
attacher, and we do not view that as burdensome--particularly given 
that utilities insist that attachers rarely invoke the self-help remedy 
or request to add contractors to utility-approved lists.
    47. Further, if an attacher does not submit information sufficient 
to demonstrate that a contractor has made the representations required 
by Sec.  1.1412(c) of the Commission's rules, utilities may respond to 
the attacher within 30 days with a denial, provided that it is ``set 
forth in [a] writing that describes the basis for rejection, 
nondiscriminatory, and based on fair application of commercially 
reasonable requirements for contractors relating to issues of safety or 
reliability.'' (As explained above, this is the standard that the 
Commission adopted in 2018 to assess whether a utility's withholding of 
consent to add additional contractors to its approved list is 
reasonable. We, therefore, decline Dominion's request to exclude the 
language ``fair application of commercially reasonable'' from the rule 
amendment that merely codifies the existing standard. Further, we 
disagree with Dominion's assessment that the rules we adopt today do 
not ``contemplate a utility's independent evaluation of any attacher-
proposed contractor on the basis of its own standards, processes, and 
protocols to ensure safety and reliability.'' Section 1.1412(c)(4) of 
the Commission's rules requires the contractor to agree ``to meet or 
exceed any uniformly applied and reasonable safety and reliability 
thresholds set by the utility, if made available,'' 47 CFR 
1.1412(c)(4), and our new rules require proposed contractors to 
successfully complete a utility's on-boarding process (including its 
evaluation and training requirements) before they are added to the list 
of contractors approved to work on the utility's poles. The rules we 
adopt today, therefore, provide ample opportunity for a utility to 
evaluate a contractor based on its own standards, processes, and 
protocols to ensure safety and reliability before the contractor is 
authorized to perform self-help work.) Finally, as has always been the 
case, the parties are free to negotiate for a longer review period for 
contractor approvals if needed. (Parties have always been free to reach 
negotiated agreements with terms that differ from our rules.)
    48. Given that complying with the deadline imposes minimal burden 
on utilities, the parties' ability to extend the deadline by agreement, 
and the right utilities have to deny a proposed contractor within the 
deadline if the information submitted by the attacher is insufficient 
to determine whether the contractor has made the representations 
required by Sec.  1.1412(c) of the Commission's rules, we find 
utilities have ample opportunity to avoid any potential risks of having 
contractors deemed approved to work on their poles.
    49. While we believe it is important to improve the self-help 
remedy by expediting action on requests to add additional qualified 
contractors to utility-approved lists, (As explained herein, the Third 
Further Notice sought comment on whether the Commission should modify 
the self-help remedy to enable attachers to access poles more quickly, 
and the record indicates that setting a deadline that ensures a prompt 
response to requests to add qualified contractors to utility-approved 
lists would promote that objective. We, thus, decline the request of 
some utilities to seek comment on such a deadline in the Further Notice 
rather than adopt one here.) we recognize that there may be 
circumstances where a utility may need to disqualify a contractor that 
was previously approved by a utility or deemed approved due to 
reasonable safety or reliability concerns, as is the case when an 
attacher selects its own contractor to perform surveys and simple make-
ready if a utility does not provide a list of approved contractors or 
the contractors on that list are not available within a reasonable 
time. We understand that having the right to disqualify contractors 
causing reasonable safety and reliability concerns is particularly 
important for work that is complex and above the communications space. 
We, therefore, make clear that utilities may disqualify a contractor 
that was previously approved by a utility or deemed approved based on 
reasonable safety or reliability concerns related to a contractor's 
failure to meet the minimum qualifications described in Sec.  1.1412(c) 
of the Commission's rules or to meet the utility's uniformly applied 
and reasonable safety or reliability standards. (We decline Dominion's 
request to remove qualifying language from the safety and reliability 
standards that may be applied to disqualify a contractor. We are 
concerned that this could lead to discriminatory disqualifications of 
contractors if the standards applied in disqualification

[[Page 41738]]

decisions are not uniformly applied and reasonable. We, thus, grant 
Dominion's request insofar as it seeks removal of a requirement that 
safety and reliability standards be ``public and commercially 
reasonable,'' but require that disqualification decisions be based on a 
contractor's failure to meet the minimum qualifications described in 
Sec.  1.1412(c) of the Commission's rules or to meet the utility's 
uniformly applied and reasonable safety and reliability thresholds, 
consistent with Sec.  1.1412(c)(4) of the Commission's rules.) We view 
this as consistent with the right afforded to utilities under our rules 
to have a representative present when self-help work is performed by a 
contractor and to ``monitor a contractor's work and insist that the 
work meet utility specifications for safety and reliability, including 
requirements that may exceed NESC standards'' on a nondiscriminatory 
basis. Although attachers and utilities are obligated to try to resolve 
any disagreements, electric utilities are entitled to make final 
determinations in disputes over capacity, safety, reliability, and 
generally applicable engineering purposes, consistent with Section 
224(f)(2) of the Act. (By making it clear that utilities may disqualify 
a contractor that was previously approved by a utility or deemed 
approved based on reasonable safety or reliability concerns, we fully 
address the concern raised by Dominion/Xcel that Section 224(f)(2) of 
the Act ``necessarily encompasses the right of a utility pole owner to 
prohibit an attacher's use of third-party contractors that have not 
been fully evaluated and approved by the utility to perform the work 
for which they were retained on the utility's poles.'' The rule we 
adopt today requires that utilities respond within 30 days to a request 
to add additional contractors to utility-approved lists based on 
whether attachers submit sufficient information to demonstrate the 
contractor's agreement to the requirements in Sec.  1.1412(c), which 
incorporates the utility's published safety and operational guidelines 
and uniformly applied and reasonable safety and reliability thresholds. 
Regardless of whether a contractor is approved by a utility or ``deemed 
approved'' due to a failure to provide a timely response, the 
contractor will not start work on the utility's poles until the 
successful completion of the utility's on-boarding process (e.g., any 
required training). And, after that, the utility retains the right to 
remove the contractor from its approved lists due to noncompliance with 
safety and reliability requirements on a nondiscriminatory basis. 
Utilities, thus, retain ample and ultimate control over contractors 
working above the communications space on their poles.) Accordingly, 
whether a contractor is added to a utility's approved list by the 
utility or at the request of an attacher, the utility ultimately has 
the authority to determine whether the contractor remains on the list 
on a going-forward basis consistent with these standards and the 
Commission's rules. (We note that our rules require utilities to ``keep 
up-to-date'' their lists of contractors authorized to perform self-help 
surveys and make-ready.)
    50. If a utility disqualifies a contractor that was previously 
added to its approved list at the request of an attacher or deemed 
approved pursuant to the requirements we adopt today, (We disagree with 
Dominion that the rule we adopt today does not permit utilities to deny 
a contractor for safety and reliability reasons. As we state above, the 
utility will have 30 days to deny a request to add the contractor to 
the utility-approved if the attacher fails to submit sufficient 
information to determine that the contractor has made the 
representations required by Sec.  1.1412(c) of the Commission's rules. 
If the utility does not respond with a denial or an approval by that 
deadline, then the contractor will be deemed approved, but may 
nonetheless be disqualified (i.e., have the approval rescinded) based 
on reasonable safety or reliability concerns related to a contractor's 
failure to meet the minimum qualifications described in Sec.  1.1412(c) 
of the Commission's rules or to meet the utility's uniformly applied 
and reasonable safety or reliability standards. Further, as we have 
made clear, a proposed contractor will not be added to the utility's 
list of contractors approved to perform self-help work until it has 
successfully completed the utility's on-boarding process, which may 
include additional evaluations and training. Accordingly, none of the 
requirements we adopt today will allow a contractor to appear on a 
utility's approved list unless and until the utility has evaluated, 
trained, and otherwise completed its on-boarding steps for contractors 
that perform work on its poles.) we require that it provide written 
notice to the attacher that it has done so and specify the bases for 
the disqualification in that notice. An attacher wishing to challenge 
the reasonableness of the disqualification may avail itself of the 
Commission's Rapid Broadband Assessment Team process or submit a 
complaint to the Commission's Enforcement Bureau.

IV. Order on Reconsideration (EEI)

    51. In this Order, we deny in part and grant in part EEI's Petition 
for Clarification and/or Reconsideration of the Commission's December 
2023 Wireline Infrastructure Declaratory Ruling. EEI seeks 
clarification and/or reconsideration of certain actions taken by the 
Commission in that Declaratory Ruling, specifically (1) removal or 
clarification of the decision that a pole replacement is not 
``necessitated solely'' by an attachment request if ``a utility's 
previous or contemporaneous change to its internal construction 
standards necessitates replacement of an existing pole,'' and (2) 
clarification to ``clearly define the narrow circumstances in which a 
utility pole owner is required to provide a copy of its easement to an 
attacher that seeks to access a pole within such easement.'' The 
Commission invited oppositions and replies to EEI's Petition by 
February 23, 2024, and it received five filings in support of the 
Petition and seven oppositions.
    52. For the reasons set forth below, we deny in part and grant in 
part EEI's Petition, specifically (1) denying EEI's request that we 
remove or clarify the determination that a pole replacement is not 
``necessitated solely'' by an attachment request if a utility's 
previous or contemporaneous change to its internal construction 
standards necessitates replacement of an existing pole (the internal 
construction standards determination) and the associated example of the 
internal construction standards determination; (2) granting 
clarification of the internal construction standards determination (and 
its associated example) to make clear that while utilities retain 
autonomy to refuse an attacher's request to replace an existing pole 
due to lack of capacity, a pole replacement is not ``necessitated 
solely'' by a new attachment request when it is necessitated (in part) 
by the utility's decision to adopt a new construction standard for the 
pole, even when the pole lacks capacity because of the new standard; 
and (3) denying reconsideration of the circumstances when a utility is 
required to provide a copy of its easement to an attacher, but granting 
clarification that the utility only has to provide a copy of the 
easement to the attacher when the utility relies on its interpretation 
of the easement to deny the attacher access to that easement.

[[Page 41739]]

A. The ``Necessitated Solely'' Clarification Was Properly Included in 
the Declaratory Ruling

    53. The Commission has, both in the Declaratory Ruling and 
elsewhere, provided examples of when a pole replacement is and is not 
``necessitated solely'' by a new attachment request for purposes of 
Sec.  1.1408(b) of our rules, which governs the allocation and 
causation of costs for a new attachment. Under Sec.  1.1408(b), a party 
with a preexisting attachment to a pole is not required to bear any of 
the costs of rearranging or replacing its attachment if such 
rearrangement or replacement ``is necessitated solely as a result of an 
additional attachment or the modification of an existing attachment 
sought by another party.'' EEI argues that the Commission should 
``remove its clarification that make-ready pole replacements that have 
been grandfathered under utility standards are not `necessitated 
solely' by the new attachment,'' asserting that this clarification: (1) 
was ``not the product of reasoned decision-making;'' (2) does not 
promote broadband development; and (3) is confusing and inappropriate. 
We deny EEI's reconsideration request because EEI's arguments were 
considered and rejected by the Commission in the underlying proceeding, 
and EEI's Petition does not raise any points warranting 
reconsideration. We also deny EEI's alternative request for the 
Commission to clarify that a utility's replacement of a grandfathered 
pole to create capacity for a new attachment is ``necessitated solely'' 
by the attacher. (According to EEI, a ``grandfathered'' pole is one 
``that is deemed `compliant' under applicable laws and codes, and by 
definition does not require replacement.'') That said, we take this 
opportunity to clarify further the contours and basis of the 
Commission's internal construction standards determination, especially 
the role of capacity (or the lack thereof) on that determination.
    54. Because of ongoing disputes regarding an attacher's 
responsibility for causing a pole replacement when a pole already 
requires replacement at the time a request is made for a new or 
modified attachment, the Commission found it appropriate to provide 
``additional examples of situations where, under Sec.  1.1408(b) of the 
Commission's rules, a pole replacement is not `necessitated solely' by 
a new attachment or modification request.'' In each of the examples 
provided in the Declaratory Ruling, other precipitating factors 
contribute to the need for a pole replacement aside from the new 
attachment request. By offering these examples, the Commission aimed to 
clarify instances where the cause of a pole replacement should not be 
solely attributed to the new attacher.
    55. In its Petition, EEI takes issue with one of the Commission's 
examples. Specifically, the Commission noted Crown Castle's argument 
that ``a pole replacement is not `necessitated solely' by a new 
attacher . . . where a pole replacement is required due to a utility 
changing its construction standard after the pole is constructed.'' 
This example was consistent with some commenter proposals and current 
practices of some commenters in the record. In deciding that a pole 
replacement is not ``necessitated solely'' by an attachment request if 
``a utility's previous or contemporaneous change to its internal 
construction standards necessitates replacement of an existing pole,'' 
the Commission added the following ``grandfathered pole'' example: ``if 
a utility has `grandfathered' a pole from compliance with its updated 
construction standards, a pole replacement to bring that pole into 
compliance with those updated standards would not be `necessitated 
solely' by an attacher's request to attach to that pole.''
    56. EEI asks that we completely strike from the Declaratory Ruling 
both the internal construction standards determination and its 
associated example. Alternatively, EEI requests that we revise the 
Declaratory Ruling to clarify that a pole replacement is not 
``necessitated solely'' by an attachment request when, at the time the 
attachment request is made, ``[a] pole replacement is required as the 
result of a utility's previous or contemporaneous change to its 
internal construction standards, such that the utility would be 
required to replace the pole even if no new attachment were made.'' EEI 
also alternatively asks that we revise the grandfathered pole example 
in the Declaratory Ruling to state: ``For clarity, if a utility has 
`grandfathered' a pole from compliance with its updated construction 
standards in accordance with applicable laws or codes, such pole is not 
deemed to require replacement for purposes of this Declaratory Ruling, 
and a pole replacement performed to create capacity for a new 
attachment that incidentally brings such pole into compliance with 
those updated standards would not be `necessitated solely' by an 
attacher's request to attach to that pole.''
    57. We deny EEI's requests. Specifically, we find that the 
reconsideration and clarifications sought by EEI go beyond (EEI and 
utilities such as CCU argue that ``simply because a new construction 
standard must apply to a pole whenever in the future it might be 
replaced does not mean that the pole needs to be replaced at the time 
the attacher requests access to the pole.'' This argument, and the 
argument that a grandfathered pole remains compliant with ``the 
electric utility's construction standards and does not require 
replacement until such time as there is a material modification to that 
pole,'' miss the point. It is the utility's change in its internal 
construction standards that has now made the pole unable to accommodate 
the new attachment and it is that condition that led us to clarify in 
the Declaratory Ruling that the new attachment request does not solely 
necessitate a pole replacement. This simple premise does not, as the 
Electric Utilities allege, ``undermine an electric utility's long-
standing right (and responsibility) to adopt and implement non-
discriminatory standards that exceed the NESC, where appropriate and 
necessary.'') our simple premise in including the internal 
constructions standard determination; namely, a pole replacement is not 
``necessitated solely'' by a new attacher where a pole replacement is 
required due to a utility changing its construction standard after the 
pole is constructed. When a utility makes a unilateral decision to 
change its internal construction standards such that the existing pole 
must now be replaced the next time it is touched, it is not the case 
that replacing that pole is ``necessitated solely'' by a new attachment 
request that comes along. We agree instead with NCTA's characterization 
that ``[b]eing what EEI calls `grandfathered' is not the same thing as 
compliant with current standards. As EEI's arguments make clear, the 
issue is one of the utility's choice of timing. The poles are not 
compliant with the latest construction standard, but the utility 
chooses when and why to replace the pole.'' (Because of the importance 
attached to the utility's sole purview on the timing of replacing a 
pole that is noncompliant with its construction standards, we disagree 
with the characterization of the Electric Utilities that ``the fact 
that `the utility chooses when and why to replace the pole,' does not 
justify the grandfathered pole ruling.'') As a result, we found it 
necessary to clarify in the Declaratory Ruling that, when a utility's 
change in construction standards contributes to the need to replace a 
pole, the new attachment request does not solely necessitate the pole 
replacement.

[[Page 41740]]

    58. However, we grant clarification insofar as we provide here an 
important caveat to the internal construction standards determination 
and associated example. We note that an important element of the 
internal construction standards determination is the capacity, or the 
lack thereof, on the existing pole. We clarify that, for purposes of 
the internal construction standards determination, when a utility is 
determining capacity on a pole to see whether a pole replacement is 
necessary, the relevant utility construction standards to consider are 
limited to the current standard and the standard immediately preceding 
that current standard. (We thus reject EEI's argument that the internal 
construction standards determination requires the utility to figure out 
``which of the many previous iterations of an electric utility's 
construction standards would be applicable'' when a pole is replaced 
following a new attachment request.) That is, assuming a pole lacks 
capacity for a requested new attachment under the utility's new 
construction standard, but capacity would exist under its immediately 
preceding construction standard, the resulting pole replacement would 
not be ``necessitated solely'' by a new attachment request. By 
contrast, if the pole lacks capacity under both the new and immediately 
preceding construction standards, then application of Sec.  1.1408(b) 
means that the new attachment request is the cause of the pole 
replacement, i.e., it is ``necessitated solely'' by the new attachment. 
The clarification we offer today can be administered easily and also 
limits unreasonable actions to delay pole replacements in order to 
force new entrants to bear the entire cost of a pole replacement. To 
the extent this was not clear from the Declaratory Ruling, we hereby 
clarify accordingly.
    59. With this clarification, we find that EEI's requests are 
unfounded. EEI bases its requests on the incomplete premise that ``[i]f 
an attacher requests access to a pole, and the pole must be changed out 
to accommodate the new attachment under the electric utility's current 
construction standards, the new attachment is the cause of the make-
ready pole replacement. In this instance, the pole would not be 
replaced `but for' the attachment request, and the need to construct a 
new pole line in accordance with an updated construction standard would 
not exist had the pole not been replaced to create capacity for the new 
attachment.'' According to EEI, the internal construction standards 
determination and associated grandfathered pole example ``can be 
interpreted as requiring pole owners to share in the cost of every 
make-ready pole replacement involving a `grandfathered' pole.'' This is 
mistaken because, as stated above, when a utility is maintaining poles 
at an immediately preceding standard, that standard is determinative of 
capacity for purposes of a new attachment request and determining 
whether a resulting pole replacement is ``necessitated solely'' by the 
new request. If that request would render the pole over capacity at the 
immediately preceding standard, then the utility could deny access 
under Section 224(f)(2) of the Act and any resulting pole replacement 
would be ``necessitated solely'' by the new request. But if the new 
attachment would only cause the pole to exceed the new standard but not 
the immediately preceding standard, then any pole replacement is not 
necessitated solely by a new attachment request, but rather is 
necessitated in part by the adoption of a new standard.
    60. We reject EEI's claim that the Commission's decisions ``run 
afoul of longstanding `cost causation' principles.'' As attachers point 
out in the record, in the internal construction standards scenario, it 
is the utility's decision to leave the original pole in place until the 
new attacher comes along that necessitates the pole replacement, at 
least in part. In fact, it is EEI's contention that may run contrary to 
our cost causation principles by positing that ``[i]f a grandfathered 
pole lacks capacity to host an additional attachment under an electric 
utility's current construction standards, the new attachment is the 
cause of a make-ready pole replacement. At the very most, the electric 
utility in this scenario would be an incidental beneficiary of the 
make-ready pole replacement, and the Commission has long held that 
incidental beneficiaries are not required to share in the cost of pole 
replacements.'' The utility is not merely an incidental beneficiary if 
the new attachment could have been accommodated on the pole under the 
utility's construction standards before they were changed, but now 
cannot because of the utility's unilateral decision to change its 
internal construction standards. Instead, the utility's decision to 
leave the existing pole in place until the new attacher comes along 
necessitates the pole replacement, at least in part. And the utility is 
far from an incidental beneficiary if it would be able to get its pole 
replaced at the new attacher's sole expense when the existing pole 
could have accommodated the new attachment under the immediately 
preceding pole construction standard.
    61. Relatedly, we reject EEI's claim that in advancing the internal 
construction standards determination, the Commission failed to consider 
the ``enormous'' economic burden placed on utilities as a result of the 
Declaratory Ruling and failed ``to balance the respective interests, 
costs, burdens, and liabilities of pole owners and attachers, or to 
assess whether reasonable limitations are needed to minimize any 
adverse impact on utility pole owners.'' Instead, we recognize that 
this determination requires utilities to bear some of the burden, but 
we must also consider the burden on attachers. The internal 
construction standard determination spreads the burden across all of 
the parties who are causing the pole replacement.
    62. Further, contrary to EEI's contention in its Petition, there 
was substantial record support for the clarification at issue. For 
example, several commenters have consistently advocated for the 
Commission to adopt a ``more transparent, just, and reasonable process 
that ensures a fair allocation of replacement costs between pole owners 
and new attachers seeking to use the poles.'' With regard specifically 
to the application of the ``necessitated solely'' language in the 
Commission's rules, Charter sought to have the Commission extend the 
clarification in the 2021 Pole Replacement Declaratory Ruling to find 
that ``when a pole is scheduled for replacement or facing imminent 
replacement,'' the pole replacement is not ``necessitated solely'' by 
an attachment request. As ACA Connects states, ``almost 18 months 
before the Commission issued the [internal construction standards 
determination], Crown Castle filed comments . . . demonstrating that 
pole owners were using internal construction standards to avoid cost-
causation principles and requiring prospective attachers to pay the 
entire cost of pole replacements.'' After full consideration of the 
record, the Commission decided to include the internal construction 
standards determination in the non-exclusive list of examples of when a 
pole replacement is not ``necessitated solely'' by an attachment 
request--an example put forward in the record by Crown Castle as far 
back as August 2022.
    63. We also find unpersuasive EEI's argument in the Petition that 
the internal construction standards determination and the grandfathered 
pole example will result in less broadband deployment because they 
would cause ``uncertainty and financial

[[Page 41741]]

risk'' for utilities. We concur with INCOMPAS that in fact ``the 
clarity provided in the Declaratory Ruling'' will advance broadband 
deployment by competitive providers ``as these companies will now be 
able to devote more resources to extending builds and reaching new 
customers rather than paying to replace aging utility poles.'' As Crown 
Castle notes, the ``Commission's decision regarding replacement of 
poles to bring them into compliance with a utility's updated 
construction standards (including so-called `grandfathered' poles) will 
promote broadband deployment by reducing costs and eliminating the 
opportunity and incentive for pole owners to manipulate the process to 
the detriment of attachers.''
    64. Finally, we reject EEI's argument in the Petition that the 
Commission's application of the ``necessitated solely'' language in 
Sec.  1.1408(b) to allocate make-ready pole replacement costs is 
``confusing and inappropriate.'' EEI claims that the `` `cost causation 
language of the fourth sentence of 1.1408(b)' speaks only of the costs 
for rearranging or replacing existing attachments.'' However, as the 
Commission explained in the Declaratory Ruling, it agreed with the 
Bureau's analysis in the 2021 Pole Replacement Declaratory Ruling that 
when the cost-allocation and cost-causation provisions in Sec.  
1.1408(b) are read together, they ``stand for the proposition that 
parties benefiting from a modification share proportionately in the 
costs of that modification, unless such modification is necessitated 
solely as a result of an additional or modified attachment of another 
party, in which case that party bears the cost of the modification.'' 
The Commission further clarified that ``it would be contrary to the 
Commission's rules and policies to require a new attacher to pay the 
entire cost of a pole replacement when a pole already requires 
replacement . . . at the time a request for a new or modified 
attachment is made.''
    65. Because the clarification in the Declaratory Ruling was both 
based on an extensive record and consistent with prior Commission 
decisions regarding pole attachments, we reject EEI's request that we 
reconsider, or clarify in the manner requested by EEI, the portion of 
the Declaratory Ruling regarding the internal construction standards 
determination and the grandfathered pole example. We do, however, 
clarify that portion of the Declaratory Ruling as described above.

B. Easement Ruling

    66. We reject EEI's request to reconsider our clarification in the 
Declaratory Ruling that, consistent with their obligations under 
Section 224(f) of the Act, ``utilities must provide potential attachers 
with a copy of a utility's easement before a utility can refuse to let 
the attacher share that easement or require the attacher to obtain its 
own easement.'' EEI asks that the Commission ``clearly define the 
narrow circumstances in which a utility pole owner is required to 
provide a copy of its easement to an attacher that seeks to access a 
pole within such easement.'' We deny EEI's reconsideration request 
because the parameters of the easement sharing ruling are plainly set 
forth in the Declaratory Ruling. We do, however, clarify that the 
utility only has to provide a copy of the easement to the attacher to 
the extent that the utility relies on an interpretation of the easement 
to deny the attacher access to that easement.
    67. Section 224(f)(1) of the Act requires a utility to provide ``a 
cable television system or any telecommunications carrier with 
nondiscriminatory access to any pole, duct, conduit, or right-of-way 
owned or controlled by it.'' In the 1996 Local Competition Order, the 
Commission found that ``the access obligations of section 224(f) apply 
when, as a matter of state law, the utility owns or controls the right-
of-way to the extent necessary to permit such access.'' Based on the 
language in Section 224(f)(1) and the Commission's interpretation of 
that language as set out in the Local Competition Order, the Commission 
concluded in the Declaratory Ruling that ``in order to enable attachers 
to effectuate their right of access under section 224(f) of the Act, 
utilities must provide potential attachers with a copy of a utility's 
easement before a utility can refuse to let the attacher share that 
easement or require the attacher to obtain its own easement. In making 
this clarification, we find that the Section 224(f) right of access 
requires the sharing of information regarding the easement in cases 
where the utility claims the easement cannot accommodate an attacher; 
it does not require the utility to alter the underlying easement or act 
in contravention of state law.'' Such a requirement is consistent with 
the best reading of Section 224(f)(1) because without information on 
the actual easement, neither attachers nor the Commission can verify 
whether the utility's denial of access is justified, and the best 
source for easement information is the utility that holds the easement. 
After all, the utility's easement shows the extent of the utility's 
ownership or control of the right-of-way under the relevant state law. 
Providing this information--which necessarily shows whether the 
attacher has a statutory right of access--gives the attacher the 
ability to make use of the pole and thus fits within the ordinary 
meaning of ``access.'' (The dictionary definition of ``access'' is 
``freedom or ability to obtain or make use of something.'')
    68. EEI asserts that as written, the Declaratory Ruling implies 
that the utility, not the attacher, is responsible in the first 
instance for any determination that must be made about the scope of the 
utility easement, and that this goes against decades of precedent and 
standard practice. (Despite EEI's claim that the Commission's easement-
sharing requirement goes against ``decades-old-precedent'', EEI cites 
to no such precedent. In rejecting this argument, we note that the 
Commission has not ruled on any easement-related parameters since 1996) 
In support of its Petition, EEI argues that: (1) ``easement information 
is not relevant to pole attachment requests or to broadband 
deployment''; (2) the clarification ``is premised on the baseless 
assertions of a single commenter to which no party had an opportunity 
to respond''; (3) the clarification ``fails to balance the costs, 
burdens, risks, and potential benefits that will flow from a new 
disclosure requirement''; and (4) the clarification ``fails to consider 
reasonable limitations on a pole owner's obligation to share easement 
information.'' We believe our clarification herein obviates the latter 
two concerns. For the reasons set forth below, however, we reject EEI's 
first two objections.
    69. We do not agree with EEI's characterization that the 
Declaratory Ruling ``implies that the utility, and not the attacher, is 
responsible in the first instance for any determination that must be 
made about the scope the utility easement.'' (We do not disagree with 
EEI's assertion that ``where an attacher seeks to use a utility 
easement to access a pole that the utility approved for attachment 
under Section 224(f), the attacher (and not the utility) must determine 
whether the applicable easement for the pole location is sufficiently 
broad to allow or encompass a third-party communications facility.'') 
Rather, we plainly clarified in the Declaratory Ruling that ``the 
section 224(f) right of access requires the sharing of information 
regarding the easement in cases where the utility claims the easement 
cannot accommodate an attacher.'' Where the

[[Page 41742]]

utility claims the easement cannot accommodate an attacher, that claim 
is presumably based on some analysis of the easement by the utility. It 
is in this limited setting that the utility is required to share 
easement information. In such a case, an attacher must be able to 
evaluate the easement to determine its scope, and the best source for 
the easement is the utility that holds it.
    70. With regard to EEI's other arguments against the easement 
ruling, they largely can be boiled down to an issue of balancing 
burdens against benefits, with EEI asserting that the Commission failed 
to consider and implement such a balance. We disagree. The burden of 
the sharing requirement is limited to ``cases where the utility claims 
the easement cannot accommodate an attacher.'' (In rejecting EEI's 
argument that the easement clarification ``fails to consider reasonable 
limitations on a pole owner's obligation to share easement 
information'', we note that just the opposite is true--the ``disclosure 
of easements should only be required when the pole owner denies an 
active request (i.e., an application) for access to a specific pole 
based on its interpretation of the scope of an applicable easement.'') 
As for the benefits and relevance of the easement sharing requirement, 
we agree with commenters who assert that the potential for disputes is 
amplified by the asymmetrical information between parties, thus slowing 
down the process of pole attachments and, consequently, delaying 
broadband deployment. By requiring utilities to provide relevant 
easement information, we are helping to level the playing field between 
utilities and attachers while also reducing the potential delays in 
broadband deployment. (This is contrary to EEI's claim that easement 
information is not relevant to pole attachment requests or to broadband 
deployment.) Thus, limiting the sharing of easement information to 
situations where the utility denies easement access is a reasonable 
limitation on a utility's obligation to share easement information 
without exacerbating the problem of asymmetrical information.
    71. Specifically with regard to utility burdens, we disagree with 
EEI's argument that we should reverse or clarify our declaration 
because utilities do not maintain copies of easements in the ordinary 
course of business but instead rely on public records, and not all 
utility easements emanate from written easement instruments. EEI's 
argument of an undue burden on utilities in producing records in this 
case misses the point. Our requirement that utilities produce easement 
information is conditioned on their claiming that the easement cannot 
accommodate the attacher, and the best source of information verifying 
the utility's claim is the utility that holds the easement. In 
accordance with Section 224(f) of the Act, we already determined that 
granting an attacher a ``right of access requires the sharing of 
information regarding the easement in cases where the utility claims 
the easement cannot accommodate an attacher.'' Thus, we are not 
requiring the utility to alter any business practices. Rather, we only 
are requiring it to provide easement information when it denies access 
to the easement, especially since it is the best source of information 
for the evidence of the denial. We further clarify, however, that the 
utility must provide this information if it denies access based on its 
interpretation of the easement.
    72. Because utilities' obligation to provide easement information 
is limited to instances in which the utility denies access to its 
easement based on its interpretation of the easement, we decline to 
adopt EEI's request to limit this obligation to instances where the 
attacher is unable to locate easement information after conducting a 
public search. The Commission has already considered this limitation 
and determined that easement information should be in the utility's 
possession if it has affirmatively denied access to an attacher. As 
NCTA notes in its opposition, ``[f]orcing attachers to obtain copies of 
easements through either public resources or title searches when the 
utility already has such easements available unequivocally adds 
unnecessary expense and delay to the broadband deployment process.''
    73. We also disagree with EEI that the easement sharing requirement 
is deficient because it was adopted based entirely on new, untested 
assertions made in an ex parte submitted by Crown Castle after the 
start of the Sunshine Period. As INCOMPAS points out, the Commission's 
inclusion of the easement clarification cites to comments submitted by 
ExteNet. In addition, as NCTA notes, ``the Declaratory Ruling was based 
on an interpretation of section 224(f) of the Act. . . . [and] the 
Commission can issue a Declaratory Ruling on its own motion 
interpreting a statute.''

V. Order on Reconsideration (CCU)

    74. In this Order, we deny CCU's Petition for Reconsideration of 
our December 2023 Fourth Wireline Infrastructure Order. In that Order, 
the Commission adopted new regulations requiring utilities to provide 
copies of their cyclical pole inspection reports to prospective 
attachers upon request. The key purpose of this requirement is to 
increase transparency and provide attachers with more information that 
might assist them in planning broadband deployment projects. At the 
same time, the Commission sought to avoid imposing undue burdens on 
utilities by limiting the requirement to providing information they 
already possess and produce in the normal course of business.
    75. CCU seeks reconsideration of this new requirement. CCU contends 
that the Commission adopted the requirement without appropriate notice 
and that the requirement is unduly burdensome, will create disputes, 
and could impede broadband deployment, all while providing no new 
benefit to prospective attachers. Four parties filed oppositions to the 
Petition. Much of the Petition relies on ``arguments that have been 
fully considered and rejected by the Commission within the same 
proceeding,'' and to that extent, we dismiss the Petition on procedural 
grounds and also deny on substantive grounds. To the extent some of 
CCU's Petition raises new arguments, we fully consider and reject them 
herein. Thus, we deny CCU's Petition for the reasons discussed below.

A. Adequate Notice of the Rule

    76. As a procedural matter, CCU argues that the Commission did not 
provide adequate notice that it might adopt a rule requiring utilities 
to provide attachers with copies of pole inspection reports. 
Specifically, CCU contends that the paragraph of the Second Further 
Notice seeking comment on whether the Commission should require 
utilities to provide more information to attachers ``contains no 
indication that utilities might be required to provide pole inspection 
reports to communications attachers.'' CCU also asserts that the first 
the public learned of the potential requirement to provide copies of 
pole inspection reports was in the Commission's November 22, 2023 Draft 
Order, which was released two weeks before the start of the sunshine 
period, after which further comment was prohibited. CCU argues that two 
weeks was not sufficient to alert utilities to the prospective ruling 
and allow them to provide meaningful responses.
    77. Groups representing attachers disagree. They state that the law 
does not require a notice of proposed rulemaking to have proposed the 
precise rule that the Commission ultimately adopts, but rather only 
that the final

[[Page 41743]]

rule be a ``logical outgrowth of its notice.'' They contend that the 
final rule on pole inspection reports was a logical outgrowth of a 
proposal in the Second Further Notice because the Commission 
specifically asked about the types of information utilities should be 
required to provide regarding the status of their poles, and both 
attachers and utilities addressed pole inspection reports as one such 
source of information in their comments, replies, and ex parte filings.
    78. We reject CCU's argument that the Commission adopted the 
transparency requirement without proper notice. As noted above, the 
relevant legal question is whether the final adopted rule was a 
``logical outgrowth'' of the issues on which the Commission sought 
comment in the Second Further Notice. ``A final rule qualifies as a 
logical outgrowth `if interested parties ``should have anticipated'' 
that a change was possible . . . .' '' That test is met here.
    79. The Second Further Notice sought comment on ``additional 
measures that the Commission could adopt that would enable attachers 
and utilities to avoid pole replacement disputes and/or resolve them 
quickly when they occur.'' As an example, the Commission noted one 
party's proposal to require utilities to provide attachers with 
``information on the condition of, and replacement plans for, their 
poles.'' The Commission also asked for comment on ``what mechanism'' 
utilities could use ``to provide such information to attachers[.]'' As 
noted above and described in more detail in the Fourth Report and 
Order, attachers made a variety of proposals for information-sharing 
requirements. Utilities responded by largely opposing such 
requirements. Most relevant here, in both comments and replies on this 
issue, commenters on both sides noted that many utilities create 
cyclical reports containing a range of information on their poles, 
including information about their condition and replacement plans. 
Attachers argued the information in such reports would be useful in 
planning projects and reducing the number of pole replacements they 
would have to pay for, while utilities generally argued the information 
would be outdated and was unnecessary in light of the same or similar 
information they already provide to prospective attachers. This debate 
continued in ex partes from both sides after the Commission released 
the Draft Order, with several parties supporting, opposing, and/or 
seeking modifications to the proposed rule.
    80. This record demonstrates the final rule was a logical outgrowth 
of the Second Further Notice. The Commission sought comments and 
proposals on requiring utilities to provide more pole-related 
information to attachers and mechanisms for doing so. It received a 
range of proposals and extensive comments, which included discussion on 
both sides regarding pole inspection reports. Parties, including CCU, 
therefore should have anticipated that a requirement to provide pole 
inspection reports was possible. Accordingly, there was no lack of 
adequate notice.

B. Substantive Challenges to the Rule

    81. Turning to the substance, CCU raises several policy arguments 
that, it contends, demonstrate that the rule on pole inspection reports 
is unwise and unnecessary. CCU contends that the information contained 
in utilities' cyclical pole inspection reports is either irrelevant to 
the attachment process or is already available through the attachment 
process, and that requiring utilities to provide such reports could 
lead to disputes and confusion between utilities and attachers that do 
not understand utilities' asset management programs and prioritization 
and regulatory requirements. CCU also argues that such disputes will 
ultimately delay broadband deployment by slowing down the processing of 
pole attachment requests and harming the collaborative relationship 
between utilities and attachers. It further says the obligation created 
by the rule would impose significant burdens on utilities, which will 
have to create electronic notification systems to keep track of 
requests and pass along the cost to attachers. CCU also contends that 
the rule raises security concerns because it risks improper disclosure 
of sensitive network information.
    82. Attachers respond that the information in cyclical pole 
inspection reports will indeed be beneficial, such as in helping them 
ensure the utility is complying with Commission rules and helping them 
negotiate with utilities when the reports reveal an issue with an 
attachers' planned route. They note, as others did in their prior 
comments and replies, that pole inspection reports can sometimes be 
outdated, but nevertheless can contain more information than attachers 
might otherwise receive from utilities, and that this additional 
transparency can help reduce or resolve disputes and allow for better 
planning of a project before the make-ready process begins.
    83. As a threshold matter, CCU and others already raised, and the 
Commission already considered, CCU's arguments regarding the value or 
need for the information in pole inspection reports, the potential for 
disputes or confusion, the possible impact on broadband deployment, and 
the burden of the new requirement on utilities. For example, as Altice 
notes, CCU's Petition incorporates entire passages from its Reply 
submitted in response to the Second Further Notice, altering only a few 
words. (For example, the arguments at pages 13-15 of the CCU Petition 
are a nearly verbatim repeat of the arguments at pages 12-14 of CCU's 
Reply to the Second Further Notice.) CCU's Petition also reiterates the 
same arguments already presented by it and other utilities in comments 
and replies submitted in response to the Second Further Notice and in 
ex parte submissions after the Draft Order was released.
    84. Furthermore, the Commission in the Fourth Wireline 
Infrastructure Order already fully considered the arguments raised in 
the Petition. The Commission explained that while it is aware that 
cyclical pole inspection reports may sometimes have outdated 
information and that there will be some burden on utilities to provide 
attachers with such reports, attachers still view the reports as 
valuable. The Commission therefore strove to strike a balance by 
limiting the new requirement to information that already exists and 
that utilities already collect in the normal course of business. The 
Commission also considered the potential burden on utilities and the 
effect of new collection and disclosure obligations when it rejected 
several more extensive information-sharing proposals by attachers. 
Moreover, as noted in the Fourth Report and Order, the Commission still 
strongly urges utilities and attachers to collaborate and cooperate in 
disclosing and reviewing pole-related information and finding the most 
efficient ways to address pole attachments and pole replacements. CCU's 
argument on security concerns likewise was already raised and 
considered in the Fourth Wireline Infrastructure Order. As the 
Commission noted, such risks can be addressed through redactions or 
non-disclosure agreements.
    85. CCU also argues that the deadlines associated with the 
requirement to provide cyclical inspection reports are problematic. The 
rule requires utilities to provide attachers with cyclical pole 
inspection reports for the poles covered by an application within 10 
business days of a written request. CCU states that utilities' ability 
to meet that deadline will vary depending on the volume of such a 
request and the availability of team members who process such 
applications.
    86. CCU's argument does not warrant changing or removing the timing

[[Page 41744]]

requirements. At this time, the argument is speculative, and the 
Commission's rule already seeks to limit the burden on utilities by 
limiting its reach only to pre-existing pole inspection reports. (To 
the extent utilities find it impossible to comply with the deadline 
requirement, they may seek relief through appropriate channels.) We 
also decline to reconsider the requirements because the 10-business-day 
deadline was stated in the Draft Order, and CCU submitted an ex parte 
filing related to the pole inspection reports requirement after public 
release of the Draft Order. Thus, CCU should have raised its concerns 
about the response deadline then.
    87. CCU further asserts that the rule does not afford utilities 
sufficient time to inform a new attacher that it is restarting the 
clock for application review after an attacher's revision of its 
application. If an attacher revises a request after reviewing pole 
inspection reports, the new rule requires the utility to inform the 
attacher that it is restarting the clock on the application, and to do 
so within the lesser of five business days or the number of days 
remaining in the 45-day application approval period (or 60 days for 
larger orders). CCU contends that the addition of another time 
constraint on utility personnel will merely allow communications 
attachers to game the system to their advantage, such as by making vast 
changes in an application at a time that leaves the utility unable to 
timely notify the attacher that the application clock has restarted, 
and thus no time to review the changes. (Electric Utilities go further 
and assert that ``there is little interest in the `amendment' component 
of the [transparency rule] and/or that there are no cognizable uses for 
it'' because the record is silent on this component of the rule.)
    88. Once again, CCU's argument is not enough to warrant changing or 
removing the timing requirements. The rule appropriately balances 
competing interests by permitting attachers to amend their applications 
and permitting utilities to extend the application review period if 
attachers choose to do so. We expect that the utilities' discretion to 
extend the review period will provide a strong incentive for attachers 
not to seek to game the system, as last-minute amendments may be more 
likely to lead the utility to restart the 45-day clock due to lack of 
sufficient review time, and thus delay the processing of the attachment 
request. Moreover, as CCU concedes, it already requested that the 45-
day timeline restart automatically when an attacher revises an 
application, but the Commission rejected that proposal, finding that 
the procedures it was adopting ``are sufficiently tailored to account 
for the needs of utilities to review amended applications while not 
needlessly slowing deployment.'' While CCU disagrees with that 
decision, it has failed to explain why a utility pole owner, when it 
chooses to restart the clock, is not able to inform the attacher within 
the required period. Moreover, the new advance notice and meet-and-
confer requirements we adopt today for Large Orders, and the new 
advance notice requirement we adopt for Mid-Sized Orders associated 
with a single network deployment, should help reduce these situations 
from occurring in the first instance.
    89. Finally, CCU asserts that the rule on cyclical pole inspection 
reports would reduce utilities' incentive to replace poles to 
accommodate attachers and could lead to some utilities simply denying 
access, which would be counter to the Commission's goals in the 
proceeding. In the Fourth Report and Order, however, the Commission 
took pains to adopt a rule that balanced the interests of utilities and 
attachers and limited the burden on utilities by requiring them to 
provide pole inspection reports that already exist and that the 
utilities already prepare in the normal course of business. The 
Commission also rejected a number of transparency proposals that would 
have been materially more burdensome and costly for utilities, and 
strongly encouraged utilities and attachers to collaborate and 
cooperate on ways to make the processing of pole attachment 
applications more efficient for all involved. CCU's arguments do not 
cause us to challenge the Commission's conclusion that the new 
transparency rule strikes the appropriate balance, and we therefore 
decline to reconsider the rule on that basis. (CCU previously argued 
that imposing more duties and deadlines on utilities would undermine 
their incentive to perform voluntary pole replacements. The Commission 
took account of such arguments when limiting the obligation here to 
pole inspection reports that already exist and that utilities already 
create in the normal course of business and in rejecting more extensive 
information-sharing proposals. CCU's Petition adds nothing new.)

VI. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis

    90. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as 
amended (RFA), the Federal Communications Commission (Commission) 
incorporated an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) in the 
Accelerating Wireline Broadband Deployment by Removing Barriers to 
Infrastructure Investment, Third Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 
(Third Further Notice) released in December of 2023. The Commission 
sought written public comment on the proposals in the Third Further 
Notice, including comment on the IRFA. No comments were filed 
addressing the IRFA. This Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) 
conforms to the RFA and it (or summaries thereof) will be published in 
the Federal Register.

A. Need for, and Objectives of, the Fifth Report and Order

    91. In the Fifth Report and Order, the Commission adopts rules and 
policy changes that will make the pole attachment process faster and 
cheaper, particularly when poles have to be replaced during broadband 
buildouts. In the last five years, the Commission took significant 
steps in setting standards for the discussions between utilities and 
telecommunications companies about the timing and cost of attaching 
broadband equipment to utility poles, with the backstop of a robust 
complaint process when parties cannot agree on the rates, terms, and 
conditions for pole attachments. In the Fifth Report and Order, we 
adopt rules (1) requiring attachers to provide written notice to 
utilities of forthcoming pole attachment orders of a certain size; (2) 
providing that if an attacher submits an application for a Mid-Sized 
Order associated with a single network deployment or Large Order 
without the requisite advance notice, the utility can treat the 
application as the advance notice, and the timelines are tolled for the 
relevant advance notice period; (3) imposing a meet-and-confer 
requirement following the requisite advance notice for Large Orders; 
(4) establishing a new set of timelines for utilities to complete each 
pole access phase for large orders; (5) requiring utilities to notify 
attachers within 15 days of receiving a complete application whether 
they can meet the survey and notify attachers within 15 days of payment 
of a make-ready estimate that they will not be able to meet the and 
make-ready deadline; (6) adding a self-help remedy for make-ready 
estimates, provided certain safeguards are met; (7) declaring that 
application size and frequency limits that extend pole attachment 
timelines beyond the limits set forth in Sec.  1.411 violate our rules; 
and (8) requiring utilities to respond to a request to add contractors 
to a utility-approved list within 30 days of receiving the request or 
the contractor will be ``deemed approved.''

[[Page 41745]]

B. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response 
to the IRFA

    92. There were no comments raised that specifically addressed the 
proposed rules and policies presented in the Third Further Notice IRFA. 
Nonetheless, the Commission considered the potential impact of the 
rules proposed in the IRFA on small entities and took steps where 
appropriate and feasible to reduce the compliance burden for small 
entities in order to reduce the economic impact of the rules enacted 
herein on such entities.

C. Response to Comments by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small 
Business Administration

    93. Pursuant to the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, which amended 
the RFA, the Commission is required to respond to any comments filed by 
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration 
(SBA), and to provide a detailed statement of any change made to the 
proposed rules as a result of those comments. The Chief Counsel did not 
file any comments in response to the proposed rules in this proceeding.

D. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which 
the Rules Will Apply

    94. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of, and where 
feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that may be 
affected by the rules adopted herein. The RFA generally defines the 
term ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms ``small 
business,'' ``small organization,'' and ``mall governmental 
jurisdiction.'' In addition, the term ``small business'' has the same 
meaning as the term ``small-business concern'' under the Small Business 
Act. A ``small-business concern'' is one which: (1) is independently 
owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of operation; and 
(3) satisfies any additional criteria established by the SBA.
    95. Small Businesses, Small Organizations, Small Governmental 
Jurisdictions. Our actions, over time, may affect small entities that 
are not easily categorized at present. We therefore describe, at the 
outset, three broad groups of small entities that could be directly 
affected herein. First, while there are industry specific size 
standards for small businesses that are used in the regulatory 
flexibility analysis, according to data from the Small Business 
Administration's (SBA) Office of Advocacy, in general a small business 
is an independent business having fewer than 500 employees. These types 
of small businesses represent 99.9% of all businesses in the United 
States, which translates to 34.75 million businesses.
    96. Next, the type of small entity described as a ``small 
organization'' is generally ``any not-for-profit enterprise which is 
independently owned and operated and is not dominant in its field.'' 
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) uses a revenue benchmark of $50,000 
or less to delineate its annual electronic filing requirements for 
small exempt organizations. Nationwide, for tax year 2022, there were 
approximately 530,109 small exempt organizations in the U.S. reporting 
revenues of $50,000 or less according to the registration and tax data 
for exempt organizations available from the IRS.
    97. Finally, the small entity described as a ``small governmental 
jurisdiction'' is defined generally as ``governments of cities, 
counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special 
districts, with a population of less than fifty thousand.'' U.S. Census 
Bureau data from the 2022 Census of Governments indicate there were 
90,837 local governmental jurisdictions consisting of general purpose 
governments and special purpose governments in the United States. Of 
this number, there were 36,845 general purpose governments (county, 
municipal, and town or township) with populations of less than 50,000 
and 11,879 special purpose governments (independent school districts) 
with enrollment populations of less than 50,000. Accordingly, based on 
the 2022 U.S. Census of Governments data, we estimate that at least 
48,724 entities fall into the category of ``small governmental 
jurisdictions.''
1. Internet Access Service Providers
    98. Wired Broadband Internet Access Service Providers (Wired ISPs). 
Providers of wired broadband internet access service include various 
types of providers except dial-up internet access providers. Wireline 
service that terminates at an end user location or mobile device and 
enables the end user to receive information from and/or send 
information to the internet at information transfer rates exceeding 200 
kilobits per second (kbps) in at least one direction is classified as a 
broadband connection under the Commission's rules. Wired broadband 
internet services fall in the Wired Telecommunications Carriers 
industry. The SBA small business size standard for this industry 
classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer employees as small. U.S. Census 
Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 3,054 firms that operated in 
this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated 
with fewer than 250 employees.
    99. Additionally, according to Commission data on internet access 
services as of June 30, 2019, nationwide there were approximately 2,747 
providers of connections over 200 kbps in at least one direction using 
various wireline technologies. The Commission does not collect data on 
the number of employees for providers of these services, therefore, at 
this time we are not able to estimate the number of providers that 
would qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard. 
However, in light of the general data on fixed technology service 
providers in the Commission's 2022 Communications Marketplace Report, 
we believe that the majority of wireline internet access service 
providers can be considered small entities.
    100. Internet Service Providers (Non-Broadband). Internet access 
service providers using client-supplied telecommunications connections 
(e.g., dial-up ISPs) as well as VoIP service providers using client-
supplied telecommunications connections fall in the industry 
classification of All Other Telecommunications. The SBA small business 
size standard for this industry classifies firms with annual receipts 
of $40 million or less as small. For this industry, U.S. Census Bureau 
data for 2017 show that there were 1,079 firms in this industry that 
operated for the entire year. Of those firms, 1,039 had revenue of less 
than $25 million. Consequently, under the SBA size standard a majority 
of firms in this industry can be considered small.
2. Wireline Providers
    101. Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The U.S. Census Bureau 
defines this industry as establishments primarily engaged in operating 
and/or providing access to transmission facilities and infrastructure 
that they own and/or lease for the transmission of voice, data, text, 
sound, and video using wired communications networks. Transmission 
facilities may be based on a single technology or a combination of 
technologies. Establishments in this industry use the wired 
telecommunications network facilities that they operate to provide a 
variety of services, such as wired telephony services, including VoIP 
services, wired (cable) audio and video programming distribution, and 
wired broadband internet services. By exception, establishments 
providing satellite television distribution services using facilities 
and infrastructure that they

[[Page 41746]]

operate are included in this industry. Wired Telecommunications 
Carriers are also referred to as wireline carriers or fixed local 
service providers.
    102. The SBA small business size standard for Wired 
Telecommunications Carriers classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer 
employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there 
were 3,054 firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of 
this number, 2,964 firms operated with fewer than 250 employees. 
Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal Service 
Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 4,590 providers 
that reported they were engaged in the provision of fixed local 
services. Of these providers, the Commission estimates that 4,146 
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's 
small business size standard, most of these providers can be considered 
small entities.
    103. Local Exchange Carriers (LECs). Neither the Commission nor the 
SBA has developed a size standard for small businesses specifically 
applicable to local exchange services. Providers of these services 
include both incumbent and competitive local exchange service 
providers. Wired Telecommunications Carriers is the closest industry 
with an SBA small business size standard. Wired Telecommunications 
Carriers are also referred to as wireline carriers or fixed local 
service providers. The SBA small business size standard for Wired 
Telecommunications Carriers classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer 
employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there 
were 3,054 firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of 
this number, 2,964 firms operated with fewer than 250 employees. 
Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal Service 
Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 4,590 providers 
that reported they were fixed local exchange service providers. Of 
these providers, the Commission estimates that 4,146 providers have 
1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's small business 
size standard, most of these providers can be considered small 
entities.
    104. Incumbent Local Exchange Carriers (Incumbent LECs). Neither 
the Commission nor the SBA have developed a small business size 
standard specifically for incumbent local exchange carriers. Wired 
Telecommunications Carriers is the closest industry with an SBA small 
business size standard. The SBA small business size standard for Wired 
Telecommunications Carriers classifies firms having 1,500 or fewer 
employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there 
were 3,054 firms in this industry that operated for the entire year. Of 
this number, 2,964 firms operated with fewer than 250 employees. 
Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal Service 
Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 1,212 providers 
that reported they were incumbent local exchange service providers. Of 
these providers, the Commission estimates that 916 providers have 1,500 
or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's small business size 
standard, the Commission estimates that the majority of incumbent local 
exchange carriers can be considered small entities.
    105. Competitive Local Exchange Carriers (LECs). Neither the 
Commission nor the SBA has developed a size standard for small 
businesses specifically applicable to local exchange services. 
Providers of these services include several types of competitive local 
exchange service providers. Wired Telecommunications Carriers is the 
closest industry with a SBA small business size standard. The SBA small 
business size standard for Wired Telecommunications Carriers classifies 
firms having 1,500 or fewer employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau data 
for 2017 show that there were 3,054 firms that operated in this 
industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated with 
fewer than 250 employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the 
2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, 
there were 3,378 providers that reported they were competitive local 
service providers. Of these providers, the Commission estimates that 
3,230 providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the 
SBA's small business size standard, most of these providers can be 
considered small entities.
    106. Interexchange Carriers (IXCs). Neither the Commission nor the 
SBA have developed a small business size standard specifically for 
Interexchange Carriers. Wired Telecommunications Carriers is the 
closest industry with a SBA small business size standard. The SBA small 
business size standard for Wired Telecommunications Carriers classifies 
firms having 1,500 or fewer employees as small. U.S. Census Bureau data 
for 2017 show that there were 3,054 firms that operated in this 
industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated with 
fewer than 250 employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the 
2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, 
there were 127 providers that reported they were engaged in the 
provision of interexchange services. Of these providers, the Commission 
estimates that 109 providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. 
Consequently, using the SBA's small business size standard, the 
Commission estimates that the majority of providers in this industry 
can be considered small entities
    107. Operator Service Providers (OSPs). Neither the Commission nor 
the SBA has developed a small business size standard specifically for 
operator service providers. The closest applicable industry with an SBA 
small business size standard is Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The 
SBA small business size standard classifies a business as small if it 
has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show 
that there were 3,054 firms in this industry that operated for the 
entire year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated with fewer than 250 
employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal 
Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 20 
providers that reported they were engaged in the provision of operator 
services. Of these providers, the Commission estimates that all 20 
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's 
small business size standard, all of these providers can be considered 
small entities.
    108. Other Toll Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
developed a small business size standard specifically for operator 
service providers. The closest applicable industry with a SBA small 
business size standard is Wired Telecommunications Carriers. The SBA 
small business size standard classifies a business as small if it has 
1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that 
there were 3,054 firms in this industry that operated for the entire 
year. Of this number, 2,964 firms operated with fewer than 250 
employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal 
Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 20 
providers that reported they were engaged in the provision of operator 
services. Of these providers, the Commission estimates that all 20 
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's 
small business size standard, all of these providers can be considered 
small entities.

[[Page 41747]]

3. Wireless Providers--Fixed and Mobile
    109. The broadband internet access service provider category 
covered by these new rules may cover multiple wireless firms and 
categories of regulated wireless services. Thus, to the extent the 
wireless services listed below are used by wireless firms for broadband 
internet access service, the actions may have an impact on those small 
businesses as set forth above and further below. In addition, for those 
services subject to auctions, we note that, as a general matter, the 
number of winning bidders that claim to qualify as small businesses at 
the close of an auction does not necessarily represent the number of 
small businesses currently in service. Also, the Commission does not 
generally track subsequent business size unless, in the context of 
assignments and transfers or reportable eligibility events, unjust 
enrichment issues are implicated.
    110. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite). This 
industry comprises establishments engaged in operating and maintaining 
switching and transmission facilities to provide communications via the 
airwaves. Establishments in this industry have spectrum licenses and 
provide services using that spectrum, such as cellular services, paging 
services, wireless internet access, and wireless video services. The 
SBA size standard for this industry classifies a business as small if 
it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show 
that there were 2,893 firms in this industry that operated for the 
entire year. Of that number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 
employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the 2022 Universal 
Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, there were 594 
providers that reported they were engaged in the provision of wireless 
services. Of these providers, the Commission estimates that 511 
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's 
small business size standard, most of these providers can be considered 
small entities.
    111. Wireless Communications Services. Wireless Communications 
Services (WCS) can be used for a variety of fixed, mobile, 
radiolocation, and digital audio broadcasting satellite services. 
Wireless spectrum is made available and licensed for the provision of 
wireless communications services in several frequency bands subject to 
Part 27 of the Commission's rules. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers 
(except Satellite) is the closest industry with an SBA small business 
size standard applicable to these services. The SBA small business size 
standard for this industry classifies a business as small if it has 
1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that 
there were 2,893 firms that operated in this industry for the entire 
year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. 
Thus under the SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a 
majority of licensees in this industry can be considered small.
    112. The Commission's small business size standards with respect to 
WCS involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment payments in 
the auction of licenses for the various frequency bands included in 
WCS. When bidding credits are adopted for the auction of licenses in 
WCS frequency bands, such credits may be available to several types of 
small businesses based average gross revenues (small, very small and 
entrepreneur) pursuant to the competitive bidding rules adopted in 
conjunction with the requirements for the auction and/or as identified 
in the designated entities section in part 27 of the Commission's rules 
for the specific WCS frequency bands.
    113. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the 
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning 
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction 
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently 
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent 
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers, 
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the 
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for 
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to 
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would 
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
    114. 1670-1675 MHz Services. These wireless communications services 
can be used for fixed and mobile uses, except aeronautical mobile. 
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest 
industry with an SBA small business size standard applicable to these 
services. The SBA size standard for this industry classifies a business 
as small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data 
for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms that operated in this 
industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed 
fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the 
Commission estimates that a majority of licensees in this industry can 
be considered small.
    115. According to Commission data as of November 2021, there were 
three active licenses in this service. The Commission's small business 
size standards with respect to 1670-1675 MHz Services involve 
eligibility for bidding credits and installment payments in the auction 
of licenses for these services. For licenses in the 1670-1675 MHz 
service band, a ``small business'' is defined as an entity that, 
together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has average 
gross revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years, 
and a ``very small business'' is defined as an entity that, together 
with its affiliates and controlling interests, has had average annual 
gross revenues not exceeding $15 million for the preceding three years. 
The 1670-1675 MHz service band auction's winning bidder did not claim 
small business status.
    116. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the 
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning 
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction 
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently 
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent 
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers, 
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the 
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for 
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to 
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would 
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
    117. Wireless Telephony. Wireless telephony includes cellular, 
personal communications services, and specialized mobile radio 
telephony carriers. The closest applicable industry with an SBA small 
business size standard is Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except 
Satellite). The size standard for this industry under SBA rules is that 
a business is small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. For this 
industry, U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 
firms that operated for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms 
employed fewer than 250 employees. Additionally, based on Commission 
data in the 2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of December 
31, 2021, there were 331 providers that reported they were engaged in 
the provision of cellular, personal communications services, and 
specialized mobile radio services. Of

[[Page 41748]]

these providers, the Commission estimates that 255 providers have 1,500 
or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's small business size 
standard, most of these providers can be considered small entities.
    118. Broadband Personal Communications Service. The broadband 
personal communications services (PCS) spectrum encompasses services in 
the 1850-1910 and 1930-1990 MHz bands. The closest industry with a SBA 
small business size standard applicable to these services is Wireless 
Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite). The SBA small business 
size standard for this industry classifies a business as small if it 
has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show 
that there were 2,893 firms that operated in this industry for the 
entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 
employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the Commission estimates 
that a majority of licensees in this industry can be considered small.
    119. Based on Commission data as of November 2021, there were 
approximately 5,060 active licenses in the Broadband PCS service. The 
Commission's small business size standards with respect to Broadband 
PCS involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment payments in 
the auction of licenses for these services. In auctions for these 
licenses, the Commission defined ``small business'' as an entity that, 
together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has average 
gross revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years, 
and a ``very small business'' as an entity that, together with its 
affiliates and controlling interests, has had average annual gross 
revenues not exceeding $15 million for the preceding three years. 
Winning bidders claiming small business credits won Broadband PCS 
licenses in C, D, E, and F Blocks.
    120. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the 
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning 
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction 
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently 
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent 
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers, 
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the 
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for 
licensees providing these, at this time we are not able to estimate the 
number of licensees with active licenses that would qualify as small 
under the SBA's small business size standard.
    121. Specialized Mobile Radio Licenses. Special Mobile Radio (SMR) 
licenses allow licensees to provide land mobile communications services 
(other than radiolocation services) in the 800 MHz and 900 MHz spectrum 
bands on a commercial basis including but not limited to services used 
for voice and data communications, paging, and facsimile services, to 
individuals, Federal Government entities, and other entities licensed 
under Part 90 of the Commission's rules. Wireless Telecommunications 
Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest industry with a SBA small 
business size standard applicable to these services. The SBA size 
standard for this industry classifies a business as small if it has 
1,500 or fewer employees. For this industry, U.S. Census Bureau data 
for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms in this industry that 
operated for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed 
fewer than 250 employees. Additionally, based on Commission data in the 
2022 Universal Service Monitoring Report, as of December 31, 2021, 
there were 95 providers that reported they were of SMR (dispatch) 
providers. Of this number, the Commission estimates that all 95 
providers have 1,500 or fewer employees. Consequently, using the SBA's 
small business size standard, these 119 SMR licensees can be considered 
small entities.
    122. Based on Commission data as of December 2021, there were 3,924 
active SMR licenses. However, since the Commission does not collect 
data on the number of employees for licensees providing SMR services, 
at this time we are not able to estimate the number of licensees with 
active licenses that would qualify as small under the SBA's small 
business size standard. Nevertheless, for purposes of this analysis the 
Commission estimates that the majority of SMR licensees can be 
considered small entities using the SBA's small business size standard.
    123. Lower 700 MHz Band Licenses. The lower 700 MHz band 
encompasses spectrum in the 698-746 MHz frequency bands. Permissible 
operations in these bands include flexible fixed, mobile, and broadcast 
uses, including mobile and other digital new broadcast operation; fixed 
and mobile wireless commercial services (including FDD- and TDD-based 
services); as well as fixed and mobile wireless uses for private, 
internal radio needs, two-way interactive, cellular, and mobile 
television broadcasting services. Wireless Telecommunications Carriers 
(except Satellite) is the closest industry with a SBA small business 
size standard applicable to licenses providing services in these bands. 
The SBA small business size standard for this industry classifies a 
business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census 
Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms that operated in 
this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed 
fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the 
Commission estimates that a majority of licensees in this industry can 
be considered small.
    124. According to Commission data as of December 2021, there were 
approximately 2,824 active Lower 700 MHz Band licenses. The 
Commission's small business size standards with respect to Lower 700 
MHz Band licensees involve eligibility for bidding credits and 
installment payments in the auction of licenses. For auctions of Lower 
700 MHz Band licenses the Commission adopted criteria for three groups 
of small businesses. A very small business was defined as an entity 
that, together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has 
average annual gross revenues not exceeding $15 million for the 
preceding three years, a small business was defined as an entity that, 
together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has average 
gross revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years, 
and an entrepreneur was defined as an entity that, together with its 
affiliates and controlling interests, has average gross revenues not 
exceeding $3 million for the preceding three years. In auctions for 
Lower 700 MHz Band licenses seventy-two winning bidders claiming a 
small business classification won 329 licenses, twenty-six winning 
bidders claiming a small business classification won 214 licenses, and 
three winning bidders claiming a small business classification won all 
five auctioned licenses.
    125. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the 
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning 
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction 
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently 
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent 
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers, 
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the 
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for 
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to 
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would 
qualify as

[[Page 41749]]

small under the SBA's small business size standard.
    126. Upper 700 MHz Band Licenses. The upper 700 MHz band 
encompasses spectrum in the 746-806 MHz bands. Upper 700 MHz D Block 
licenses are nationwide licenses associated with the 758-763 MHz and 
788-793 MHz bands. Permissible operations in these bands include 
flexible fixed, mobile, and broadcast uses, including mobile and other 
digital new broadcast operation; fixed and mobile wireless commercial 
services (including FDD- and TDD-based services); as well as fixed and 
mobile wireless uses for private, internal radio needs, two-way 
interactive, cellular, and mobile television broadcasting services. 
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest 
industry with a SBA small business size standard applicable to licenses 
providing services in these bands. The SBA small business size standard 
for this industry classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or 
fewer employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 
2,893 firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of that 
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus, under the 
SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of 
licensees in this industry can be considered small.
    127. According to Commission data as of December 2021, there were 
approximately 152 active Upper 700 MHz Band licenses. The Commission's 
small business size standards with respect to Upper 700 MHz Band 
licensees involve eligibility for bidding credits and installment 
payments in the auction of licenses. For the auction of these licenses, 
the Commission defined a ``small business'' as an entity that, together 
with its affiliates and controlling principals, has average gross 
revenues not exceeding $40 million for the preceding three years, and a 
``very small business'' an entity that, together with its affiliates 
and controlling principals, has average gross revenues that are not 
more than $15 million for the preceding three years. Pursuant to these 
definitions, three winning bidders claiming very small business status 
won five of the twelve available licenses.
    128. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the 
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning 
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction 
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently 
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent 
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers, 
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the 
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for 
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to 
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would 
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
    129. Air-Ground Radiotelephone Service. Air-Ground Radiotelephone 
Service is a wireless service in which licensees are authorized to 
offer and provide radio telecommunications service for hire to 
subscribers in aircraft. A licensee may provide any type of air-ground 
service (i.e., voice telephony, broadband internet, data, etc.) to 
aircraft of any type, and serve any or all aviation markets 
(commercial, government, and general). A licensee must provide service 
to aircraft and may not provide ancillary land mobile or fixed services 
in the 800 MHz air-ground spectrum.
    130. The closest industry with an SBA small business size standard 
applicable to these services is Wireless Telecommunications Carriers 
(except Satellite). The SBA small business size standard for this 
industry classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer 
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 
firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this 
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the 
SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of 
licensees in this industry can be considered small.
    131. Based on Commission data as of December 2021, there were 
approximately four licensees with 110 active licenses in the Air-Ground 
Radiotelephone Service. The Commission's small business size standards 
with respect to Air-Ground Radiotelephone Service involve eligibility 
for bidding credits and installment payments in the auction of 
licenses. For purposes of auctions, the Commission defined ``small 
business'' as an entity that, together with its affiliates and 
controlling interests, has average gross revenues not exceeding $40 
million for the preceding three years, and a ``very small business'' as 
an entity that, together with its affiliates and controlling interests, 
has had average annual gross revenues not exceeding $15 million for the 
preceding three years. In the auction of Air-Ground Radiotelephone 
Service licenses in the 800 MHz band, neither of the two winning 
bidders claimed small business status.
    132. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the 
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning 
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction 
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently 
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent 
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers, 
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, the Commission 
does not collect data on the number of employees for licensees 
providing these services therefore, at this time we are not able to 
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would 
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
    133. 3,650-3,700 MHz Band. Wireless broadband service licensing in 
the 3,650-3,700 MHz band provides for nationwide, non-exclusive 
licensing of terrestrial operations, utilizing contention-based 
technologies, in the 3,650 MHz band (i.e., 3,650-3,700 MHz). Licensees 
are permitted to provide services on a non-common carrier and/or on a 
common carrier basis. Wireless broadband services in the 3,650-3,700 
MHz band fall in the Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except 
Satellite) industry with an SBA small business size standard that 
classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. 
Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms that 
operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 
firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the SBA size 
standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of licensees in this 
industry can be considered small.
    134. The Commission has not developed a small business size 
standard applicable to 3,650-3,700 MHz band licensees. Based on the 
licenses that have been granted, however, we estimate that the majority 
of licensees in this service are small internet Access Service 
Providers (ISPs). As of November 2021, Commission data shows that there 
were 902 active licenses in the 3,650-3,700 MHz band. However, since 
the Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for 
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to 
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would 
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
    135. Fixed Microwave Services. Fixed microwave services include 
common carrier, private-operational fixed, and broadcast auxiliary 
radio services. They also include the Upper Microwave Flexible Use 
Service (UMFUS), Millimeter Wave Service (70/80/90 GHz), Local 
Multipoint Distribution

[[Page 41750]]

Service (LMDS), the Digital Electronic Message Service (DEMS), 24 GHz 
Service, Multiple Address Systems (MAS), and Multichannel Video 
Distribution and Data Service (MVDDS), where in some bands licensees 
can choose between common carrier and non-common carrier status. 
Wireless Telecommunications Carriers (except Satellite) is the closest 
industry with a SBA small business size standard applicable to these 
services. The SBA small size standard for this industry classifies a 
business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer employees. U.S. Census 
Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 firms that operated in 
this industry for the entire year. Of this number, 2,837 firms employed 
fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the SBA size standard, the 
Commission estimates that a majority of fixed microwave service 
licensees can be considered small.
    136. The Commission's small business size standards with respect to 
fixed microwave services involve eligibility for bidding credits and 
installment payments in the auction of licenses for the various 
frequency bands included in fixed microwave services. When bidding 
credits are adopted for the auction of licenses in fixed microwave 
services frequency bands, such credits may be available to several 
types of small businesses based average gross revenues (small, very 
small and entrepreneur) pursuant to the competitive bidding rules 
adopted in conjunction with the requirements for the auction and/or as 
identified in Part 101 of the Commission's rules for the specific fixed 
microwave services frequency bands.
    137. In frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the 
Commission notes that as a general matter, the number of winning 
bidders that qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction 
does not necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently 
in service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent 
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers, 
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the 
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for 
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to 
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would 
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
    138. Broadband Radio Service and Educational Broadband Service. 
Broadband Radio Service systems, previously referred to as Multipoint 
Distribution Service (MDS) and Multichannel Multipoint Distribution 
Service (MMDS) systems, and ``wireless cable,'' transmit video 
programming to subscribers and provide two-way high speed data 
operations using the microwave frequencies of the Broadband Radio 
Service (BRS) and Educational Broadband Service (EBS) (previously 
referred to as the Instructional Television Fixed Service (ITFS)). 
Wireless cable operators that use spectrum in the BRS often 
supplemented with leased channels from the EBS, provide a competitive 
alternative to wired cable and other multichannel video programming 
distributors. Wireless cable programming to subscribers resembles cable 
television, but instead of coaxial cable, wireless cable uses microwave 
channels.
    139. In light of the use of wireless frequencies by BRS and EBS 
services, the closest industry with a SBA small business size standard 
applicable to these services is Wireless Telecommunications Carriers 
(except Satellite). The SBA small business size standard for this 
industry classifies a business as small if it has 1,500 or fewer 
employees. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 2,893 
firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this 
number, 2,837 firms employed fewer than 250 employees. Thus under the 
SBA size standard, the Commission estimates that a majority of 
licensees in this industry can be considered small.
    140. According to Commission data as of December 2021, there were 
approximately 5,869 active BRS and EBS licenses. The Commission's small 
business size standards with respect to BRS involves eligibility for 
bidding credits and installment payments in the auction of licenses for 
these services. For the auction of BRS licenses, the Commission adopted 
criteria for three groups of small businesses. A very small business is 
an entity that, together with its affiliates and controlling interests, 
has average annual gross revenues exceed $3 million and did not exceed 
$15 million for the preceding three years, a small business is an 
entity that, together with its affiliates and controlling interests, 
has average gross revenues exceed $15 million and did not exceed $40 
million for the preceding three years, and an entrepreneur is an entity 
that, together with its affiliates and controlling interests, has 
average gross revenues not exceeding $3 million for the preceding three 
years. Of the ten winning bidders for BRS licenses, two bidders 
claiming the small business status won 4 licenses, one bidder claiming 
the very small business status won three licenses and two bidders 
claiming entrepreneur status won six licenses. One of the winning 
bidders claiming a small business status classification in the BRS 
license auction has an active licenses as of December 2021.
    141. The Commission's small business size standards for EBS define 
a small business as an entity that, together with its affiliates, its 
controlling interests and the affiliates of its controlling interests, 
has average gross revenues that are not more than $55 million for the 
preceding five (5) years, and a very small business is an entity that, 
together with its affiliates, its controlling interests and the 
affiliates of its controlling interests, has average gross revenues 
that are not more than $20 million for the preceding five (5) years. In 
frequency bands where licenses were subject to auction, the Commission 
notes that as a general matter, the number of winning bidders that 
qualify as small businesses at the close of an auction does not 
necessarily represent the number of small businesses currently in 
service. Further, the Commission does not generally track subsequent 
business size unless, in the context of assignments or transfers, 
unjust enrichment issues are implicated. Additionally, since the 
Commission does not collect data on the number of employees for 
licensees providing these services, at this time we are not able to 
estimate the number of licensees with active licenses that would 
qualify as small under the SBA's small business size standard.
4. Satellite Service Providers
    142. Satellite Telecommunications. This industry comprises firms 
``primarily engaged in providing telecommunications services to other 
establishments in the telecommunications and broadcasting industries by 
forwarding and receiving communications signals via a system of 
satellites or reselling satellite telecommunications.'' Satellite 
telecommunications service providers include satellite and earth 
station operators. The SBA small business size standard for this 
industry classifies a business with $44 million or less in annual 
receipts as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that 275 firms 
in this industry operated for the entire year. Of this number, 242 
firms had revenue of less than $25 million. Consequently, using the 
SBA's small business size standard most satellite telecommunications 
service providers can be considered small entities. The Commission 
notes however, that the SBA's revenue small business size

[[Page 41751]]

standard is applicable to a broad scope of satellite telecommunications 
providers included in the U.S. Census Bureau's Satellite 
Telecommunications industry definition. Additionally, the Commission 
neither requests nor collects annual revenue information from satellite 
telecommunications providers, and is therefore unable to more 
accurately estimate the number of satellite telecommunications 
providers that would be classified as a small business under the SBA 
size standard.
    143. All Other Telecommunications. This industry is comprised of 
establishments primarily engaged in providing specialized 
telecommunications services, such as satellite tracking, communications 
telemetry, and radar station operation. This industry also includes 
establishments primarily engaged in providing satellite terminal 
stations and associated facilities connected with one or more 
terrestrial systems and capable of transmitting telecommunications to, 
and receiving telecommunications from, satellite systems. Providers of 
internet services (e.g., dial-up ISPs) or Voice over Internet Protocol 
(VoIP) services, via client-supplied telecommunications connections are 
also included in this industry. The SBA small business size standard 
for this industry classifies firms with annual receipts of $40 million 
or less as small. U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 show that there were 
1,079 firms in this industry that operated for the entire year. Of 
those firms, 1,039 had revenue of less than $25 million. Based on this 
data, the Commission estimates that the majority of ``All Other 
Telecommunications'' firms can be considered small.
5. Cable Service Providers
    144. Because Section 706 of the Act requires us to monitor the 
deployment of broadband using any technology, we anticipate that some 
broadband service providers may not provide telephone service. 
Accordingly, we describe below other types of firms that may provide 
broadband services, including cable companies, MDS providers, and 
utilities, among others.
    145. Cable and Other Subscription Programming. The U.S. Census 
Bureau defines this industry as establishments primarily engaged in 
operating studios and facilities for the broadcasting of programs on a 
subscription or fee basis. The broadcast programming is typically 
narrowcast in nature (e.g., limited format, such as news, sports, 
education, or youth-oriented). These establishments produce programming 
in their own facilities or acquire programming from external sources. 
The programming material is usually delivered to a third party, such as 
cable systems or direct-to-home satellite systems, for transmission to 
viewers. The SBA small business size standard for this industry 
classifies firms with annual receipts less than $47 million as small. 
Based on U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017, 378 firms operated in this 
industry during that year. Of that number, 149 firms operated with 
revenue of less than $25 million a year and 44 firms operated with 
revenue of $25 million or more. Based on this data, the Commission 
estimates that a majority of firms in this industry are small.
    146. Cable Companies and Systems (Rate Regulation). The Commission 
has developed its own small business size standard for the purpose of 
cable rate regulation. Under the Commission's rules, a ``small cable 
company'' is one serving 400,000 or fewer subscribers nationwide. Based 
on industry data, there are about 420 cable companies in the U.S. Of 
these, only seven have more than 400,000 subscribers. In addition, 
under the Commission's rules, a ``small system'' is a cable system 
serving 15,000 or fewer subscribers. Based on industry data, there are 
about 4,139 cable systems (headends) in the U.S. Of these, about 639 
have more than 15,000 subscribers. Accordingly, the Commission 
estimates that the majority of cable companies and cable systems are 
small.
    147. Cable System Operators (Telecom Act Standard). The 
Communications Act of 1934, as amended, contains a size standard for a 
``small cable operator,'' which is ``a cable operator that, directly or 
through an affiliate, serves in the aggregate fewer than one percent of 
all subscribers in the United States and is not affiliated with any 
entity or entities whose gross annual revenues in the aggregate exceed 
$250,000,000.'' For purposes of the Telecom Act Standard, the 
Commission determined that a cable system operator that serves fewer 
than 498,000 subscribers, either directly or through affiliates, will 
meet the definition of a small cable operator. Based on industry data, 
only six cable system operators have more than 498,000 subscribers. 
Accordingly, the Commission estimates that the majority of cable system 
operators are small under this size standard. We note however, that the 
Commission neither requests nor collects information on whether cable 
system operators are affiliated with entities whose gross annual 
revenues exceed $250 million. Therefore, we are unable at this time to 
estimate with greater precision the number of cable system operators 
that would qualify as small cable operators under the definition in the 
Communications Act.
6. All Other Telecommunications
    148. Electric Power Generators, Transmitters, and Distributors. The 
U.S. Census Bureau defines the utilities sector industry as comprised 
of ``establishments, primarily engaged in generating, transmitting, 
and/or distributing electric power. Establishments in this industry 
group may perform one or more of the following activities: (1) operate 
generation facilities that produce electric energy; (2) operate 
transmission systems that convey the electricity from the generation 
facility to the distribution system; and (3) operate distribution 
systems that convey electric power received from the generation 
facility or the transmission system to the final consumer.'' This 
industry group is categorized based on fuel source and includes 
Hydroelectric Power Generation, Fossil Fuel Electric Power Generation, 
Nuclear Electric Power Generation, Solar Electric Power Generation, 
Wind Electric Power Generation, Geothermal Electric Power Generation, 
Biomass Electric Power Generation, Other Electric Power Generation, 
Electric Bulk Power Transmission and Control and Electric Power 
Distribution.
    149. The SBA has established a small business size standard for 
each of these groups based on the number of employees which ranges from 
having fewer than 250 employees to having fewer than 1,000 employees. 
U.S. Census Bureau data for 2017 indicate that for the Electric Power 
Generation, Transmission and Distribution industry there were 1,693 
firms that operated in this industry for the entire year. Of this 
number, 1,552 firms had less than 250 employees. Based on this data and 
the associated SBA size standards, the majority of firms in this 
industry can be considered small entities.

E. Description of Economic Impact and Projected Reporting, 
Recordkeeping and Other Compliance Requirements for Small Entities

    150. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of the 
projected reporting, recordkeeping and other compliance requirements 
for the rules adopted herein, including an estimate of the classes of 
small entities which will be subject to the requirement and the type of 
professional skills necessary for preparation of the report or record.
    151. In the Fifth Report and Order, we adopt new, advance notice 
and pre-planning requirements in the pole attachment process for Orders 
of a

[[Page 41752]]

certain size to facilitate greater coordination between attachers and 
utilities. Parties seeking to use the pole attachment timelines for a 
Mid-Sized Order associated with a single network deployment or Large 
Order must send written advance notice of the forthcoming Order to 
utilities as soon as practicable, but not less than 15 days in advance 
of submitting a Mid-Sized Order associated with a single network 
deployment and not less than 60 days in advance of submitting a Large 
Order. The notice should contain, at a minimum, (1) the attacher's 
contact information; (2) a detailed description of the proposed 
deployment area(s) and anticipated route(s); (3) an anticipated build-
out schedule; and (4) a request to meet with the utility within 30 days 
of the date of the notice for Large Orders. If an attachers submits an 
application with providing the required written advance notice 
(including the required minimum information), the utility can treat the 
application as the advance notice, and the applicable timelines will 
tolled during the relevant advance notice period. Attachers and 
utilities must also meet and confer within 30 days after written 
advance notice of Large Orders is given.
    152. We also create new, fixed pole attachment phase timelines for 
Large Orders, specifying the time for completion of each pole access 
phase. These new timelines add incremental days to all stages of the 
pole attachment process to recognize the concern that, as pole 
attachment orders become larger, they become more complex and thus 
require more time to complete. Additionally, we improve our existing 
pole attachment timelines by (1) requiring utilities to notify 
attachers within 15 days of receiving a complete application when they 
know or should have reason to know that they can meet the survey and 
notify attachers within 15 days of payment of a make-ready an estimate 
when they know or have reason to know that they will be unable to meet 
the make-ready deadline, (2) adding a self-help remedy for make-ready 
estimates, provided certain safeguards are met; and (3) declaring that 
application size and frequency limits that extend pole attachment 
timelines beyond the limits set forth in Sec.  1.411 violate our rules. 
Finally, we require utilities to respond to a request to add 
contractors to a utility-approved list within 30 days of receiving the 
request or the contractor will be deemed approved. These new 
requirements are expected to be minimally burdensome, as they merely 
require parties to (1) provide advanced information and collaboration 
that both utilities and attachers claim is lacking and will be useful, 
(2) continue collaborative efforts begun under the new advanced notice 
and pre-planning requirements, and (3) will ensure that parties can 
readily access and work on poles without concomitant burden on 
utilities and attachers.
    153. The Commission does not have sufficient information on the 
record to determine whether small entities will be required to hire 
professionals to comply with its decisions, or to quantify the cost of 
compliance for small entities with the Fifth Report and Order. While 
some small entities may have some unique burdens, the Commission 
anticipates the requirements for pole attachment disputes and data 
collection by utility companies will result in greater cost savings 
because the more collaborative approach adopted in these rules will 
increase efficiency and result in faster broadband deployment.

F. Discussion of Steps Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic 
Impact on Small Entities, and Significant Alternatives Considered

    154. The RFA requires an agency to provide ``a description of the 
steps the agency has taken to minimize the significant economic impact 
on small entities . . . including a statement of the factual, policy, 
and legal reasons for selecting the alternative adopted in the final 
rule and why each one of the other significant alternatives to the rule 
considered by the agency which affect the impact on small entities was 
rejected.''
    155. The Commission took steps to minimize significant economic 
impact on small entities and considered alternatives to new rules and 
processes adopted in the Fifth Report and Order that may impact small 
entities. By imposing a written advance notice requirement for Mid-Size 
and Large Orders and a meet-and-confer requirement for Large Orders, we 
address utilities' concern that attachers are often not providing 
sufficient notice and attachers' concern utilities are often 
nonresponsive, practices that harm utilities and attachers and 
ultimately delay buildout. However, we do not impose the same new 
written advance notice requirement for smaller orders because they do 
not have the same impact as larger orders, nor for Very Large Orders 
because the parties are still required to engage in good faith 
negotiation of the attachment timelines. And while we adopt a new 
timeline for Large Orders, it is longer than the timelines for Regular 
and Mid-Sized Orders to incentivize attachers to submit smaller orders, 
which will allow utilities to better manage their workflows and 
contractors and thus timely complete applications. The Commission also 
considered and adopted a proposal regarding the pole caps for the 
expanded timeline for Large Orders based on commenters' experience 
deploying broadband projects. Moreover, at utilities' request, we adopt 
certain safeguards for an attacher-produced estimate to ensure that 
utilities can manage their poles. We also clarified that a utility must 
approve or deny a contractor based on the sufficiency of the 
information provided under our newly adopted 30 day timeframe, the 
utility can take additional time to on-board and train the contractors 
and remain in compliance with the Commission's rules.
    156. In considering alternatives to the rules, we declined to adopt 
certain proposals that are burdensome, unnecessary, or would impose 
significant costs on utilities or attachers with little or no benefit 
to broadband deployment. For example, we decline proposed new timelines 
for Large Orders that are too lengthy to help attachers efficiently 
meet broadband buildout deadlines. We also declined to establish 
timelines for Very Large Orders nor require a utility itself to 
establish ``reasonable'' timelines for Very Large Orders, as there may 
be reasons beyond the utility's control that will prevent it from 
establishing such timelines.

G. Report to Congress

    157. The Commission will send a copy of the Fifth Report and Order, 
including this FRFA, in a report to Congress pursuant to the 
Congressional Review Act. In addition, the Commission will send a copy 
of the Fifth Report and Order, including this FRFA, to the Chief 
Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA and will publish a copy of the Fifth 
Report and Order, and this FRFA (or summaries thereof) in the Federal 
Register.

VII. Procedural Matters

    158. Paperwork Reduction Act. This document may contain new or 
modified information collection requirements subject to the Paperwork 
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), Public Law 104-13. Specifically, the rules 
adopted in 47 CFR 1.1403(b), 1.1411(c) through (k), and 1.1412(a) and 
(b), (e) may require new or modified information collections. All such 
new or modified information collection requirements will be submitted 
to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for

[[Page 41753]]

review under Section 3507(d) of the PRA. OMB, the general public, and 
other Federal agencies will be invited to comment on the new or 
modified information collection requirements contained in this 
proceeding. In addition, we note that pursuant to the Small Business 
Paperwork Relief Act of 2002, Public Law 107-198, see 44 U.S.C. 
3506(c)(4), we previously sought specific comment on how the Commission 
might further reduce the information collection burden for small 
business concerns with fewer than 25 employees. In this document, we 
describe several steps we have taken to minimize the formation 
collection burdens on small entities.
    159. Regulatory Flexibility Act. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 
1980, as amended (RFA), requires that an agency prepare a regulatory 
flexibility analysis for notice and comment rulemakings, unless the 
agency certifies that ``the rule will not, if promulgated, have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.'' Accordingly, the Commission has prepared a Final Regulatory 
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) concerning the possible impact of the rule 
changes contained in this Fourth Report and Order on small entities. 
The FRFA is set forth in Appendix B.
    160. Congressional Review Act. The Commission has determined, and 
the Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, 
Office of Management and Budget, concurs, that this rule is non-major 
under the Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 804(2). The Commission 
will send a copy of this Fifth Report and Order and Orders on 
Reconsideration to Congress and the Government Accountability Office 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).''

VIII. Ordering Clauses

    161. Accordingly, it is ordered that pursuant to sections 1-4, 201, 
202, 224, and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 
U.S.C. 151-54, 201, 202, 224, and 303(r), the Fifth Report and Order, 
Fourth Further Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, and Orders on 
Reconsideration hereby is adopted and part 1 of the Commission's rules, 
47 CFR part 1, is amended as set forth in Appendix A. (Pursuant to 
Executive Order 14215, 90 FR 10447 (Feb. 20, 2025), this regulatory 
action has been determined to be not significant under Executive Order 
12866, 58 FR 68708 (Dec. 28, 1993)).
    162. It is further ordered that the Fifth Report and Order shall 
become effective 30 days after publication in the Federal Register, 
except that the amendments to Sections 1.1403(b), 1.1411(c) through 
(k), and 1.1412(a) and (b), (e) which may contain new or modified 
information collection requirements, will not become effective until 
the Office of Management and Budget completes review of any information 
collection requirements that the Wireline Competition Bureau determines 
is required under the Paperwork Reduction Act. The Commission directs 
the Wireline Competition Bureau to announce the effective date for 
Sections 1.1403(b), 1.1411(c) through (k), and 1.1412(a) and (b), (e) 
by subsequent Public Notice.
    163. It is further ordered that, pursuant to the authority 
contained in Section 405 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 
47 U.S.C. 405, and Sec.  1.429 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.429, 
the Petition for Clarification and/or Reconsideration filed by the 
Edison Electric Institute is denied in part and granted in part.
    164. It is further ordered that, pursuant to the authority 
contained in Section 405 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 
47 U.S.C. 405, and Sec.  1.429 of the Commission's rules, 47 CFR 1.429, 
the Petition for Reconsideration of the Coalition of Concerned 
Utilities is denied.
    165. It is further ordered that the Orders on Reconsideration are 
effective upon publication in the Federal Register.
    166. It is further ordered that, pursuant to 47 CFR 1.4(b)(1), the 
period for filing petitions for reconsideration or petitions for 
judicial review of this Fifth Report and Order and Orders on 
Reconsideration will commence on the date that a summary of this Fifth 
Report and Order and Orders on Reconsideration is published in the 
Federal Register.
    167. It is further ordered that the Office of the Managing 
Director, Performance Evaluation and Records Management, shall send a 
copy of this Fifth Report and Order and Orders on Reconsideration in a 
report to be sent to Congress and the Government Accountability Office 
pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, see 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).

List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 1

    Practice and procedure.

Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene Dortch,
Secretary.

Final Rules

    For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Federal 
Communications Commission amends 47 CFR part 1 as follows:

PART 1--PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE

0
1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  47 U.S.C. chs. 2, 5, 9, 13; 28 U.S.C. 2461 note; 47 
U.S.C. 1754, unless otherwise noted.


0
2. Amend Sec.  1.1403 by revising paragraphs (b) and (c)(3) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  1.1403   Duty to provide access; modifications; notice of 
removal, increase or modification; petition for temporary stay; and 
cable operator notice.

* * * * *
    (b) Requests for access to a utility's poles, ducts, conduits or 
rights-of-way by a telecommunications carrier or cable operator must be 
in writing. If access is not granted within the time periods specified 
in Sec. Sec.  1.1411(d)(1) through (2) and (h), the utility must 
confirm the denial in writing by the applicable deadline. The utility's 
denial of access shall be specific, shall include all relevant evidence 
and information supporting its denial, and shall explain how such 
evidence and information relate to a denial of access for reasons of 
lack of capacity, safety, reliability or engineering standards.
    (c) * * *
    (3) Any modification of facilities by the utility other than make-
ready noticed pursuant to Sec.  1.1411(f), routine maintenance, or 
modification in response to emergencies.
* * * * *

0
3. Amend Sec.  1.1411 by:
0
a. Adding paragraphs (a)(4) and (5);
0
b. Redesignating paragraphs (c) through (j) as paragraphs (d) through 
(k);
0
c. Adding new paragraph (c);
0
d. Revising newly redesignated paragraphs (d)(2), (d)(3)(i) and (iii), 
(d)(4)(iv)(A) and (B);
0
e. Revising the first sentence in the introductory text of newly 
redesignated paragraph (e);
0
f. Revising the introductory text of newly redesignated paragraph (f) 
and paragraphs (f)(1)(ii) and (iv), (f)(2)(ii) and (v), and (f)(3);
0
g. Adding paragraph (f)(4);
0
h. Revising newly redesignated paragraphs (g), (h)(1) through (5), the 
second sentence of paragraph (i)(3), and the introductory text of 
paragraph (j)(1);
0
i. Redesignating the newly redesignated paragraph (j)(2) as paragraph 
(j)(3), adding new paragraph (j)(2), and revising the introductory text 
of newly redesignated paragraph (j)(3);
0
j. Revising the introductory text of newly redesignated paragraph (k), 
the introductory text of paragraph (k)(2),

[[Page 41754]]

    The revisions and additions read as follows:


Sec.  1.1411   Timeline for access to utility poles.

    (a) * * *
    (4) The term ``Mid-Sized Order'' means pole attachment orders 
greater than the lesser of 300 poles or 0.5 percent of the utility's 
poles in a state and up to the lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of 
the utility's poles in a state.
    (5) The term ``Large Order'' means pole attachment orders greater 
than the lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of the utility's poles in a 
state up to the lesser of 6,000 poles or 10 percent of the utility's 
poles in a state.
* * * * *
    (c) Advance notice for Mid-Sized and Large Orders; meet and confer 
for Large Orders. (1) New attachers shall give written advance notice 
to utilities as soon as practicable, but in no event less than 15 days 
before submitting a Mid-Sized Order and 60 days before submitting a 
Large Order. For Mid-Sized Orders only, the advance notice requirement 
is limited to instances where the order threshold would be exceeded by 
pole attachment application(s) that are part of a single network 
deployment project being undertaken by the new attacher. The notice 
shall set forth detailed information that will allow the utility to 
properly assess the potential resource needs for the order, including 
but not limited to: (1) the new attacher's contact information: (2) a 
description of the proposed deployment area(s) and anticipated 
route(s); (3) an anticipated build-out schedule; and (4) for a Large 
Order a request to meet and confer with the utility within 30 days of 
the date of the notice.
    (2) If an application is filed without the required written advance 
notice, including the required minimum information, then the utility 
may, upon prompt notice to the new attacher, treat such application as 
the 15-day advance notice for Mid-Sized Orders associated with a single 
network deployment or the 60-day advance notice for Large Orders. Such 
notice from the utility to the attacher shall state that the 
application will commence the advance notice period and that the 
applicable timelines do not begin to run until after expiration of the 
relevant advance notice period. If it is a Large Order, the notice 
shall also state that the attacher must request the meet-and confer 
required by our rules. At the end of the advance notice period, the new 
attacher can submit a new application or notify the utility that it is 
continuing with its original submission as its application, and the 
utility may not impose any additional or increased fees. Failure by the 
utility to give prompt notice that it is treating the attacher's 
application as the advance notice will result in the application 
proceeding to be processed under the applicable timelines without an 
advance notice period or meet-and-confer requirement. If the attacher 
fails to request the meet-and-confer described in paragraph (c)(3) of 
this section, then the advance notice period will not begin to run 
until such request is made.
    (3) New attachers and utilities shall meet and confer within 30 
days after an advance notice is given to negotiate in good faith the 
mechanics and the timing of processing Large Orders. The parties shall 
find a mutually agreeable day and time for a meeting (which can be in 
person, virtual, or by phone) within the 30-day period after the 
advance notice is given.
    (d) * * *
    (2) Application review on the merits. A utility shall respond to 
the new attacher either by granting access or, consistent with Sec.  
1.1403(b), denying access within 45 days of receipt of a complete 
application to attach facilities to its utility poles (or within 60 
days in the case of Mid-Sized Orders or within 90 days in the case of 
Large Orders as described in paragraph (h) of this section). A utility 
may not deny the new attacher pole access based on a preexisting 
violation not caused by any prior attachments of the new attacher.
    (3) * * *.
    (i) A utility shall complete a survey of poles for which access has 
been requested within 45 days of receipt of a complete application to 
attach facilities to its utility poles (or within 60 days in the case 
of Mid-Size Orders or within 90 days in the case of Large Orders as 
described in paragraph (h) of this section). A utility shall notify a 
new attacher within 15 days of receipt of a complete application if the 
utility knows or reasonably should know that it cannot meet the survey 
deadline. A new attacher can elect self-help for the survey work 
pursuant to Sec.  1.1411(j)(1) any time after it receives the utility's 
notice.
* * * * *
    (iii) Where a new attacher has conducted a survey pursuant to 
paragraph (k)(3) of this section, a utility can elect to satisfy its 
survey obligations in this paragraph by notifying affected attachers of 
its intent to use the survey conducted by the new attacher pursuant to 
paragraph (k)(3) of this section and by providing a copy of the survey 
to the affected attachers within the time period set forth in paragraph 
(d)(3)(i) of this section. A utility relying on a survey conducted 
pursuant to paragraph (k)(3) of this section to satisfy all of its 
obligations under paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section shall have 15 
days to make such a notification to affected attachers rather than the 
applicable survey period.
    (4) * * *
    (iv) * * *
    (A) A utility that receives such an amended attachment application 
may, at its option, restart the 45-day period (or 60-day period for 
Mid-Sized Orders or 90-day period for Large Orders) for responding to 
the application and conducting the survey.
    (B) A utility electing to restart the 45-day period (or 60-day 
period for Mid-Sized Orders or 90-day period for Large Orders) shall 
notify the attacher of its intent to do so within five (5) business 
days of receipt of the amended application or by the 45th day (or 60th 
or 90th day, if applicable) after the original application is 
considered complete, whichever is earlier.
    (e) Estimate. Where a new attacher's request for access is not 
denied, a utility shall present to a new attacher a detailed, itemized 
estimate, on a pole-by-pole basis where requested, of charges to 
perform all necessary make-ready within 14 days of completing the 
survey required by paragraph (d)(3) of this section (or within 29 days 
in the case of Large Orders as described in paragraph (h)(3) of this 
section), or in the case where a new attacher has performed a survey, 
within 14 days of receipt by the utility of such survey (or within 29 
days in the case of Large Orders as described in paragraph (h)(3) of 
this section). * * *
* * * * *
    (f) Make-ready. Upon receipt of payment specified in paragraph 
(e)(2) of this section, a utility shall notify immediately and in 
writing all known entities with existing attachments that may be 
affected by the make-ready.
    (1) * * *
    (ii) Set a date for completion of make-ready in the communications 
space that is no later than 30 days after notification is sent (or up 
to 75 days in the case of Mid-Sized Orders or up to 120 days in the 
case of Large Orders as described in paragraph (h) of this section).
* * * * *
    (iv) State that if make-ready is not completed by the completion 
date set by the utility in paragraph (f)(1)(ii) in this section, the 
new attacher may complete the make-ready specified pursuant to 
paragraph (f)(1)(i) in this section.
* * * * *
    (2) * * *

[[Page 41755]]

    (ii) Set a date for completion of make-ready that is no later than 
90 days after notification is sent (or 135 days in the case of Mid-
Sized Orders or 180 days in the case of Large Orders, as described in 
paragraph (h) of this section).
* * * * *
    (v) State that if make-ready is not completed by the completion 
date set by the utility in paragraph (f)(2)(ii) in this section (or, if 
the utility has asserted its 15-day right of control, 15 days later), 
the new attacher may complete the make-ready specified pursuant to 
paragraph (f)(2)(i) of this section.
* * * * *
    (3) Once a utility provides the notices described in this section, 
it then must provide the new attacher with a copy of the notices and 
the existing attachers' contact information and address where the 
utility sent the notices. The new attacher shall be responsible for 
coordinating with existing attachers to encourage their completion of 
make-ready by the dates set forth by the utility in paragraph 
(f)(1)(ii) of this section for communications space attachments or 
paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of this section for attachments above the 
communications space.
    (4) Utilities shall notify a new attacher as soon as practicable 
but no later than 15 days after receipt of payment specified in 
paragraph (e)(2) of this section if the utility knows or reasonably 
should know that it cannot meet the make-ready deadline. Existing 
attachers shall notify the utility and a new attacher as soon as 
practicable but no later than 15 days after receiving notice from the 
utility pursuant to the requirements of paragraph (e) of this section 
that the existing attacher knows or reasonably should know that it 
cannot meet the make-ready deadline. Pursuant to paragraph (j)(3) of 
this section, a new attacher can elect self-help for the make-ready 
work that the notifying party cannot do any time after it receives the 
notice.
    (g) A utility shall complete its make-ready in the communications 
space by the same dates set for existing attachers in paragraph 
(f)(1)(ii) of this section or its make-ready above the communications 
space by the same dates for existing attachers in paragraph (f)(2)(ii) 
of this section (or if the utility has asserted its 15-day right of 
control, 15 days later).
    (h) * * *
    (1) A utility shall apply the timeline described in paragraphs (d) 
through (g) of this section to all requests for attachment up to the 
lesser of 300 poles or 0.5 percent of the utility's poles in a state.
    (2) A utility may add 15 days to the survey period described in 
paragraph (d) of this section and 45 days to the make-ready periods 
described in paragraph (f) of this section, for orders greater than the 
lesser of 300 poles or 0.5 percent of the utility's poles in a state 
and up to the lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of the utility's poles 
in a state (Mid-Sized Orders).
    (3) A utility may add 45 days to the survey period described in 
paragraph (d) of this section, 15 days to the estimate period described 
in paragraph (e) of this section, and 90 days to the make-ready periods 
described in paragraph (f) of this section to orders greater than the 
lesser of 3,000 poles or 5 percent of the utility's poles in a state up 
to the lesser of 6,000 poles or 10 percent of the utility's poles in a 
state (Large Orders).
    (4) A utility shall negotiate in good faith the timing of all 
requests for attachment larger than the lesser of 6,000 poles or 10 
percent of the utility's poles in a state.
    (5) A utility may treat multiple requests from a single new 
attacher as one request when the requests are filed within 30 days of 
one another. However, a utility shall not impose application size 
limits in combination with application frequency limits that have the 
effect of restricting the number of pole attachments new attachers may 
seek in a given timeframe.
    (i) * * *
    (3) * * * An existing attacher that so deviates shall immediately 
notify, in writing, the new attacher and other affected existing 
attachers and shall identify the affected poles and include a detailed 
explanation of the basis for the deviation and a new completion date, 
which in no event shall extend beyond 60 days from the date the notice 
described in paragraph (f)(1) of this section is sent by the utility 
(or up to 105 days in the case of Mid-Sized Orders or up to 150 days in 
the case of Large Orders). * * *
    (j) * * *
    (1) Surveys. If a utility fails to complete a survey as specified 
in paragraph (d)(3)(i) of this section, then a new attacher may conduct 
the survey in place of the utility and, as specified in Sec.  1.1412, 
hire a contractor to complete a survey.
* * * * *
    (2) Estimates. If the utility fails to present an estimate to the 
new attacher by the date specified in paragraph (e) of this section, 
then a new attacher may prepare the estimate in accordance with the 
requirements applicable to utility-prepared estimates set forth in 
paragraph (e) of this section. If a new attacher exercises its self-
help option to prepare an estimate for utility review, the new attacher 
shall (1) wait until the utility's 14-day deadline (or 29 days in the 
case of Large Orders) has expired before exercising the self-help 
remedy; (2) provide notice to the utility that it is exercising its 
self-help remedy for an estimate; (3) use an approved contractor to 
prepare the estimate in accordance with Sec.  1.1412(a) and (b); and 
(4) allow utilities the ability to review and approve the self-help 
estimate at the attacher's expense, but expenses must be reasonable and 
based only on the actual costs incurred by the utility in reviewing the 
estimate. The new attacher cannot use self-help for estimates of pole 
replacements. The utility must provide the new attacher with a written 
decision on the self-help estimate within 14 days of receiving the 
estimate from the new attacher or before it is withdrawn by the 
attacher, whichever is later. If the estimate is accepted by the 
utility, then it is subject to the reconciliation process set forth in 
Sec.  1.1411(e)(3). If the estimate is not accepted by the utility, 
then the utility must detail in writing the reasons for non-acceptance. 
The attacher then has the ability to submit a revised estimate to the 
utility without starting the pole attachment timeline from the 
beginning.
    (3) Make-ready. If make-ready is not complete by the date specified 
in paragraph (f) of this section, then a new attacher may conduct the 
make-ready in place of the utility and existing attachers, and, as 
specified in Sec.  1.1412, hire a contractor to complete the make-
ready.
* * * * *
    (k) One-touch make-ready option. For attachments involving simple 
make-ready, new attachers may elect to proceed with the process 
described in this paragraph in lieu of the attachment process described 
in paragraphs (d) through (g) and (j) of this section.
* * * * *
    (2) Application review on the merits. The utility shall review on 
the merits a complete application requesting one-touch make-ready and 
respond to the new attacher either granting or denying an application 
within 15 days of the utility's receipt of a complete application (or 
within 30 days in the case of Mid-Sized Orders or within 45 days in the 
case of Large Orders as described in paragraph (h) of this section).
* * * * *
    (ii) Within the 15-day application review period (or within 30 days 
in the case of Mid-Sized Orders or within 45

[[Page 41756]]

days in the case of Large Orders as described in paragraph (h) of this 
section), a utility may object to the designation by the new attacher's 
contractor that certain make-ready is simple. The utility's objection 
is final and determinative so long as it is specific and in writing, 
includes all relevant evidence and information supporting its decision, 
made in good faith, and explains how such evidence and information 
relate to a determination that the make-ready is not simple.
* * * * *
    (4) * * *
    (iii) In performing make-ready, if the new attacher or the utility 
determines that make-ready classified as simple is complex, then that 
specific make-ready must be halted and the determining party must 
provide immediate notice to the other party of its determination and 
the impacted poles. The affected make-ready shall then be governed by 
paragraphs (e) through (j) of this section and the utility shall 
provide the notice required by paragraph (f) of this section as soon as 
reasonably practicable.
* * * * *

0
4. Amend Sec.  1.1412 by revising the section heading, the first 
sentence in the introductory text of paragraph (b), paragraphs (b)(1) 
and (b)(2) and adding paragraph (e) to read as follows:


Sec.  1.1412   Contractors for survey, estimates, and make-ready.

* * * * *
    (b) Contractors for simple work. A utility may, but is not required 
to, keep up-to-date a reasonably sufficient list of contractors it 
authorizes to perform surveys, estimates, and simple make-ready. * * *
    (1) If the utility does not provide a list of approved contractors 
for surveys, estimates, or simple make-ready or no utility-approved 
contractor is available within a reasonable time period, then the new 
attacher may choose its own qualified contractor that meets the 
requirements in paragraph (c) of this section. When choosing a 
contractor that is not on a utility-provided list, the new attacher 
must certify to the utility that its contractor meets the minimum 
qualifications described in paragraph (c) of this section when 
providing notices required by Sec.  1.1411(j)(1)(ii), (j)(2)(i), 
(k)(3)(i), and (k)(4).
    (2) The utility may disqualify any contractor chosen by the new 
attacher that is not on a utility-provided list, but such 
disqualification must be based on reasonable safety or reliability 
concerns related to the contractor's failure to meet any of the minimum 
qualifications described in paragraph (c) of this section or to meet 
the utility's publicly available and commercially reasonable safety or 
reliability standards. The utility must provide notice of its 
contractor objection within the notice periods provided by the new 
attacher in Sec.  1.1411(j)(1)(ii), (j)(2)(i), (k)(3)(i), and (k)(4) 
and in its objection must identify at least one available qualified 
contractor.
* * * * *
    (e) Utilities must respond to an attacher's request to add 
contractors to their lists of contractors authorized to perform self-
help surveys, estimates, and make-ready, as provided by paragraphs (a) 
and (b) of this section, within 30 days of receipt.
    (1) The response must state whether the contractor meets the 
requirements of paragraph (c) of this section and will be added to the 
utility's list of approved contractors for survey, estimate, and make-
ready work pursuant to paragraph (a) or (b) of this section following 
the successful completion of any reasonable steps to begin work 
established by the utility. For contractors proposed to perform work 
above the communications space, such reasonable steps may include any 
evaluation, approval, orientation, or other requirements that the 
utility would ordinarily apply to contractors that perform work on its 
electric power system. If the contractor has been denied, the response 
must describe the bases for rejection, be nondiscriminatory, and based 
on a fair application of commercially reasonable requirements for 
contractors related to issues of safety or reliability.
    (2) If a utility fails to provide the response required by 
paragraph (e)(1) of this section within 30 days of receipt of an 
attacher's request, the contractor proposed by the attacher will be 
deemed approved to perform self-help surveys, estimates, and make-ready 
work on the utility's poles consistent with paragraphs (a) or (b) of 
this section, and must be added to the utility's approved list of 
contractors following the successful completion of any reasonable steps 
to begin work established by the utility.
    (3) A utility may disqualify a contractor that has been approved 
pursuant to paragraph (e)(1) or deemed approved pursuant to paragraph 
(e)(2) based on reasonable safety or reliability concerns related to 
the contractor's failure to meet any of the minimum qualifications 
described in paragraph (c) of this section or to meet the utility's 
uniformly applied and reasonable safety or reliability standards. 
Written notice must be provided to the attacher stating the specific 
safety and reliability bases for the disqualification.

[FR Doc. 2025-16332 Filed 8-25-25; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712-01-P