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RES 2005-16 - 00013369RESOLUTION 2005 -16 RESOLUTION OF THE CITY OF FRIDLEY, MINNESOTA, DENYING RENEWAL OF TIME WARNER, INC.'S CABLE TELEVISION FRANCHISE RECITALS 1. The City of Fridley, Minnesota ( "City ") is duly authorized under state and federal law to permit the provision of cable television services within its jurisdiction through the issuance of a franchise for that purpose. 2. In the past, Time Warner, Inc., d /b /a Time Warner Cable ( "TWC "), or its immediate authorized predecessors, has held a franchise for the purpose of providing cable television services to residents of the City. 3. TWC is presently operating under a franchise granted by Ordinance No. 904 passed and adopted by the City on May 2, 1988 (the "Franchise "). 4. The term of the Franchise expired on or about May 16, 2003. 5. The Federal Cable Act establishes a process that a cable operator holding a valid franchise may invoke for cable franchise renewals. If the process is invoked, the operator and the City must follow the federal procedures. These "formal" procedures give the cable operator the opportunity for a fair hearing on its renewal proposal. At the same time, the procedures insure that the City can deny renewal if an operator has performed poorly in the past, or is not qualified, or is not willing make a reasonable proposal to meet the community's needs and interests for the future. Under the formal process, the City is given broad authority to define what the needs and interests of the community are. It is then up to the franchise holder to submit a proposal that is reasonable to meet the community's cable - related needs and interests, taking into account the costs of meeting those needs and interests. 6. The formal renewal process under the Cable Act is a four -stage process. In the first stage, the City must conduct a proceeding to identify future, cable - related needs and interests of the community, and to review the past performance of the cable operator serving the community. Once that proceeding is complete, the City may issue a request for formal renewal proposals. In the third stage of the renewal process, the cable operator submits a renewal proposal in response to the City's request for formal renewal proposals. If an operator submits a timely and proper response, the City has four months to evaluate the proposal, and decide whether to grant renewal based on the proposal, or to preliminarily deny renewal. 7. If renewal is preliminarily denied, and the cable operator requests it, the City must commence an administrative proceeding. The four issues that are considered at that administrative proceeding are whether: 1) the cable operator has substantially complied with the material terms of the existing franchise and with applicable law; 2) the quality of the operator's service, including signal quality, response to consumer complaints, and billing practices, but without regard to the mix or quality of cable services or other services provided over the system, Resolution No. 2005 -16 Page 2 has been reasonable in light of community needs; 3) the operator has the financial, legal, and technical ability to provide the services, facilities, and equipment as set forth in the operator's proposal; and 4) the operator's proposal is reasonable to meet the future cable - related community needs and interests, taking into account the cost of meeting such needs and interests. 8. At completion of such an administrative proceeding, the City must issue a written decision either granting or denying the operator's renewal proposal. A final decision by the City to deny renewal may be based on an adverse finding on one or more of the issues specified in recital #7 above. 9. The operator may appeal a final decision by the City to deny renewal in state or federal court. 10. By letter dated November 18, 2003, following nearly three (3) years of informal renewal negotiations, TWC requested that the parties proceed with renewal under the "formal" process of the Cable Act pursuant to 47 U.S. C. § 546(a) -(g). 11. Based upon TWC's insistence on the formal renewal process, on August 16, 2004 the City Council concluded the two first stages of the formal renewal process when it adopted the Formal Needs Assessment Report ( "Report"), and issued a Request for Formal Renewal Proposal for a Cable Franchise ( "RFRP "), inviting TWC to submit a proposal describing the cable - related facilities, equipment, and services that it would provide in Fridley over the term of a new franchise. The Report and RFRP identified the cable - related needs and interests of the City and also contained a Model Franchise for meeting certain of those needs and interests. The RFRP required TWC to submit a response by November 30, 2004. 12. On November 30, 2004, TWC submitted to the City a Formal Proposal for Renewal of Cable Television Franchise (the "Proposal "). 13. Pursuant to the Cable Act, the City must, by March 30, 2005, either renew the Franchise under the terms of the Proposal or issue a preliminary assessment that the Franchise should not be renewed. 14. Under the Cable Act, the City is not required to detail the grounds for its preliminary decision. As a result, this Resolution does not list in detail all of the shortcomings of TWC's Proposal nor any problems associated with TWC's past performance. Rather, it explains some of the reasons why it is appropriate to preliminarily deny the Proposal. Given the statutory deadline of March 30, 2005 and the City Council's meeting schedule, the City's only choice at this point is to either accept TWC's Proposal as submitted or to issue a preliminary denial of renewal. 15. The grounds for preliminary assessment of denial are as follows: a. TWC's proposed language related to gross revenues seeks to change the current status of defining "gross revenues" in a manner likely to reduce revenues to the City by modifying the manner in which bad debt can be written off, as well as by Resolution No. 2005 -16 Page 3 modification of the manner in which revenues are defined so as to potentially exclude cable - related services that may expand in the future. TWC's proposed language also fails to protect the City from any potential revenue losses that may be generated by product bundling with services not currently provided for under the Franchise. b. TWC proposes to change the existing performance bond and security fund language in the Franchise, as well as to limit its access costs under the City's Right of Way ordinance. TWC's proposed security language would create an unfair additional financial risk to the City. TWC's Proposal right -of -way provisions would impose unfair costs to the taxpayers, including those that are not customers of TWC, subsidizing TWC's operations in the City. C. TWC's Proposal fails to meet the requirement that the Grantee supply the City with maps of its facilities within the City, which is of great importance to assure the City, TWC and the public that there would be no disruption of service or costly repairs necessitated by the disruption of those facilities or equipment when work is occurring within the public right -of -way. d. TWC's Proposal does not provide for the long -term construction, upgrade or even maintenance of an adequate, much less state -of -the -art, institutional network, which has been and continues to be a critical component of educational and local governmental communications within the City. e. TWC's Proposal inadequately addresses the stated need for public, educational and governmental access capacity and support within the City. TWC's Proposal offers an equipment grant that is nearly one quarter million dollars below the determined need of the City. TWC's Proposal eliminates entirely TWC's current obligations regarding the provision of public access for use by residents and subscribers in Fridley. f. TWC's Proposal would radically change the current local origination and public access practices by shifting the entire cost, staffing, and a most of the equipment component, to the City. g. TWC proposes reducing the current four (4) PEG access channels provided to the City to three (3) channels, despite the fact that the City has determined the fourth channel is needed for use by public entities. h. TWC's Proposal is for a ten (10) year franchise with a five (5) year, automatic renewal if the system is "state -of -the -art." The transitional nature of technology in this area makes anything beyond the City's ten (10) year term inadequate and against the City's interest. TWC's proposal also completely ignores the right of the City to base renewal of TWC's Franchise in ten (10) years on the then existing needs and interests of the City, instead mandating an automatic renewal based solely on whether the cable system is "state -of -the -art." Resolution No. 2005 -16 Page 4 i. TWC proposes to eliminate the current emergency system override that public safety officials in the City have stated is a necessary public safety tool. j. TWC's Proposal would require the City to abandon its current role as the protector of consumers within the City. TWC contends that it should only have to follow FCC standards, but those FCC standards expressly authorize the role of the City as the guardians of their citizens' interests as consumers. k. TWC's Proposal includes a provision that limits the ability of the City to grant a second cable franchise to a potential competitor by requiring the City to adopt "level playing field" language that is substantially more restrictive than that the City is obligated to comply with under existing state law and would create barriers to competition from other providers. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, by the City Council of the City of Fridley as follows: 1. Each and every recital set forth above is hereby incorporated as a finding and resolution of the City. 2. By passage of this resolution, the City issues a preliminary assessment that the cable franchise issued by Ordinance No. 904 should not be renewed. PASSED AND ADOPTED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF FRIDLEY THIS 14TH DAY OF MARCH, 2005. ,X�jo�k — SCOTT fLUND — MAYOR ATTEST: "940,011) DEBRA A. SKOGE — CITY CLERK