16 Tex. Admin. Code § 26.5 - Definitions
The following words and terms, when used in this chapter have the following meanings, unless the context indicates otherwise:
(1) Access customer--Any user of access
services which are obtained from a certificated telecommunications utility
(CTU).
(2) Access services--CTU
services which provide connections for or are related to the origination or
termination of intrastate telecommunications services that are generally, but
not limited to, interexchange services.
(3) Administrative review--A process under
which an application may be approved without a formal hearing.
(4) Affected person--
(A) a public utility affected by an action of
a regulatory authority;
(B) a
person whose utility service or rates are affected by a proceeding before a
regulatory authority; or
(C) a
person who:
(i) is a competitor of a public
utility with respect to a service performed by the utility; or
(ii) wants to enter into competition with a
public utility.
(5) Affiliate--
(A) a person who directly or indirectly owns
or holds at least 5.0% of the voting securities of a public utility;
(B) a person in a chain of successive
ownership of at least 5.0% of the voting securities of a public
utility;
(C) a corporation that has
at least 5.0% of its voting securities owned or controlled, directly or
indirectly, by a public utility;
(D) a corporation that has at least 5.0% of
its voting securities owned or controlled, directly or indirectly, by:
(i) a person who directly or indirectly owns
or controls at least 5.0% of the voting securities of a public utility;
or
(ii) a person in a chain of
successive ownership of at least 5.0% of the voting securities of a public
utility;
(E) a person who
is an officer or director of a public utility or of a corporation in a chain of
successive ownership of at least 5.0% of the voting securities of a public
utility; or
(F) a person determined
to be an affiliate under Public Utility Regulatory Act
§11.006.
(6)
Aggregate customer proprietary network information (CPNI)--A configuration of
customer proprietary network information that has been collected by a
telecommunications utility and organized such that none of the information will
identify an individual customer.
(7) Alternate 9-1-1 routing--The routing of
9-1-1 calls to a designated alternate location if all dedicated 9-1-1 trunks to
a primary public safety answering point are busy or out of service.
(8) Assumed name--Has the meaning assigned by
Texas Business and Commerce Code, §
36.10.
(9) Automatic dial announcing device
(ADAD)--Any automated equipment used for telephone solicitation or collection
that:
(A) is capable of storing numbers to be
called, or has a random or sequential number generator capable of producing
numbers to be called; and
(B) alone
or in conjunction with other equipment, can convey a prerecorded or synthesized
voice message to the number called without the use of a live
operator.
(10) Automatic
location identification (ALI)--The automatic display at a public safety
answering point of a caller's telephone number, the address/location of the
telephone number, and supplementary emergency services information for the
location from which a call originates.
(11) Automatic number identification
(ANI)--The telephone number associated with an access line, connection, or
station from which a call originates that is automatically transmitted by the
local switching system to an interexchange or other communications carrier or
to the operator of a 9-1-1 system.
(12) Base rate area--A specific area within
an exchange area, as set forth in the dominant certificated telecommunications
utilities' tariffs, maps or descriptions, wherein local exchange service is
furnished at uniform rates without extra mileage charges.
(13) Basic local telecommunications
service--Flat rate residential and business local exchange telephone service,
including primary directory listings; tone dialing service; access to operator
services; access to directory assistance services; access to 911 service where
provided by a local authority or dual party relay service; the ability to
report service problems seven days a week; lifeline services; and any other
service the commission, after a hearing, determines should be included in basic
local telecommunications service.
(14) Basic network services (BNS)--Those
services identified in Public Utility Regulatory Act §58.051.
(15) Baud--Unit of signaling speed reflecting
the number of discrete conditions or signal elements transmitted per
second.
(16) Bellcore--Bell
Communications Research, Inc.
(17)
Billing agent--Any entity that submits charges to a billing telecommunications
utility on behalf of itself or any service provider.
(18) Billing telecommunications utility--Any
telecommunications provider, as defined in the Public Utility Regulatory Act
§51.002 that issues a bill directly to a customer for any
telecommunications product or service.
(19) Bit Error Ratio (BER)--The ratio of the
number of bits received in error to the total number of bits transmitted in a
given time interval.
(20) Bit
Rate--The rate at which data bits are transmitted over a communications path,
normally expressed in bits per second.
(21) Bona fide request--A written request to
an incumbent local exchange company (ILEC) from a CTU or an enhanced service
provider, requesting that the ILEC unbundle its network/services to the extent
ordered by the Federal Communications Commission. A bona fide request indicates
an intent to purchase the service subject to the purchaser being able to obtain
acceptable rates, terms, and conditions.
(22) Business service--A telecommunications
service provided a customer where the use is primarily of a business,
professional, institutional or otherwise occupational nature.
(23) Busy hour--The clock hour each day
during which the greatest usage occurs.
(24) Busy season--That period of the year
during which the greatest volume of traffic is handled in a switching
office.
(25) Call aggregator--Any
person or entity that owns or otherwise controls telephones intended to be
utilized by the public, which control is evidenced by the authority to post
notices on and/or unblock access at the telephone.
(26) Call splashing--Call transferring
(whether caller-requested or operator service provider-initiated) that results
in a call being rated and/or billed from a point different from that where the
call originated.
(27) Call
transferring--Handing off a call from one operator service provider (OSP) to
another OSP.
(28) Caller
identification materials (caller ID materials)--Any advertisements, educational
materials, training materials, audio and video marketing devices, and any
information disseminated about caller ID services.
(29) Caller identification service (caller ID
service)--A service offered by a telecommunications provider that provides
calling party information to a device capable of displaying the
information.
(30) Calling area--The
area within which telecommunications service is furnished to customers under a
specific schedule of exchange rates. A "local" calling area may include more
than one exchange area.
(31)
Calling party information--
(A) the telephone
listing number and/or name of the customer from whose telephone instrument a
telephone number is dialed; or
(B)
other information that may be used to identify the specific originating number
or originating location of a wire or electronic communication transmitted by a
telephone instrument.
(32) Capitalization--Long-term debt plus
total equity.
(33) Carrier of
choice--An option that allows an individual to choose an interexchange carrier
for long distance calls made through Telecommunications Relay
Service.
(34) Carrier-initiated
change--A change in the telecommunications utility serving a customer that was
initiated by the telecommunications utility to which the customer is changed,
whether the switch is made because a customer did or did not respond to direct
mail solicitation, telemarketing, or other actions initiated by the
carrier.
(35) Central office--A
switching unit in a telecommunications system which provides service to the
general public, having the necessary equipment and operating arrangements for
terminating and interconnecting customer lines and trunks or trunks
only.
(36) Census block group
(CBG)--A United States Census Bureau geographic designation that generally
contains between 250 and 550 housing units.
(37) Certificated service area--The
geographic area within which a company has been authorized to provide basic
local telecommunications services pursuant to a certificate of convenience and
necessity (CCN), a certificate of operating authority (COA), or a service
provider certificate of operating authority (SPCOA) issued by the
commission.
(38) Certificated
telecommunications utility--A telecommunications utility that has been granted
either a CCN, a COA, or a SPCOA.
(39) Class of service or customer class--A
description of utility service provided to a customer which denotes such
characteristics as nature of use (business or residential) or type of rate
(flat rate or message rate). Classes may be further subdivided into grades,
denoting individual or multiparty line or denoting quality of
service.
(40) Commercial mobile
radio service (CMRS)--
(A) As defined in
47 C.F.R. §
20.3, a mobile service that is:
(i) provided for profit with, i.e., the
intent of receiving compensation or monetary gain;
(ii) an interconnected service; and
(iii) available to the public, or to such
classes of eligible users as to be effectively available to a substantial
portion of the public; or
(B) the functional equivalent of such a
mobile service described in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph.
(41) Commission--The Public
Utility Commission of Texas.
(42)
Commission on State Emergency Communications (CSEC)--The state commission with
the responsibilities and authority as specified in Texas Health and Safety
Code, Chapter 771.
(43) Competitive
exchange service--Any of the following services, when provided on an inter- or
intrastate basis within an exchange area: central office based PBX-type
services for systems of 75 stations or more; billing and collection services;
high speed private line services of 1.544 megabits or greater; customized
services; private line and virtual private line services; resold or shared
local exchange telephone services if permitted by tariff; dark fiber services;
non-voice data transmission service when offered as a separate service and not
as a component of basic local telecommunications service; dedicated or
virtually dedicated access services; services for which a local exchange
company has been granted authority to engage in pricing flexibility pursuant to
§
26.211 of this title (relating to
Rate-Setting Flexibility for Services Subject to Significant Competitive
Challenges); any service initially provided within an exchange after October
26, 1992, if first provided by an entity other than the incumbent local
exchange company (companies) certificated to provide service within that
exchange; and any other service the commission declares is not local exchange
telephone service.
(44) Competitive
services (CS)--Those services as defined in Public Utility Regulatory Act
§58.151, and any other service the commission subsequently categorizes as
a competitive service.
(45)
Completed call--A call that is answered by the called party.
(46) Complex service--The provision of a
circuit requiring special treatment, special equipment, or special engineering
design, including but not limited to private lines, WATS, PBX trunks, rotary
lines, and special assemblies.
(47)
Consumer good or service--
(A) Real property
or tangible or intangible personal property that is normally used for personal,
family, or household purposes, including personal property intended to be
attached to or installed in any real property;
(B) A cemetery lot;
(C) A time-share estate; or
(D) A service related to real or personal
property.
(48) Consumer
telephone call--An unsolicited call made to a residential telephone number to:
(A) solicit a sale of a consumer good or
service;
(B) solicit an extension
of credit for a consumer good or service; or
(C) obtain information that will or may be
used to directly solicit a sale of a consumer good or service or to extend
credit for the sale.
(49)
Cooperative--An incumbent local exchange company that is a cooperative
corporation.
(50) Cooperative
corporation--
(A) An electric cooperative
corporation organized and operating under the Electric Cooperative Corporation
Act, Texas Utilities Code Annotated, Chapter 161, or a predecessor statute to
Chapter 161 and operating under that chapter; or
(B) A telephone cooperative corporation
organized under the Telephone Cooperative Act, Texas Utilities Code, Chapter
162, or a predecessor statute to Chapter 162 and operating under that
chapter.
(51) Corporate
name--Has the meaning assigned by Texas Business Corporation Act, Article
§2.05.
(52) Corporation--A
domestic or foreign corporation, joint-stock company, or association, and each
lessee, assignee, trustee, receiver or other successor in interest of the
corporation, company, or association, that has any of the powers or privileges
of a corporation not possessed by an individual or partnership. The term does
not include a municipal corporation, except as expressly provided by the Public
Utility Regulatory Act.
(53) Custom
calling-type services--Call management services available from a central office
switching system including, but not limited to, call forwarding, call waiting,
caller ID, or automatic recall.
(54) Customer access line--A unit of
measurement representing a telecommunications circuit or, in the case of ISDN,
a telecommunications channel designated for a particular customer. One customer
access line shall be counted for each circuit which is capable of generating
usage on the line side of the switched network or a private line circuit,
regardless of the quantity or ownership of customer premises equipment
connected to each circuit. In the case of multiparty lines, each party shall be
counted as a separate customer access line.
(55) Customer-initiated change--A change in
the telecommunications utility serving a customer that is initiated by the
customer and is not the result of direct mail solicitation, telemarketing, or
other actions initiated by the carrier.
(56) Customer premises equipment
(CPE)--Telephone terminal equipment located at a customer's premises. This does
not include overvoltage protection equipment, inside wiring, coin-operated (or
pay) telephones, "company-official" equipment, mobile telephone equipment,
"911" equipment, equipment necessary for provision of communications for
national defense, or multiplexing equipment used to deliver multiple channels
to the customer.
(57) Customer
proprietary network information (CPNI), customer-specific--Any information
compiled about a customer by a telecommunications utility in the normal course
of providing telephone service that identifies the customer by matching such
information with the customer's name, address, or billing telephone number.
This information includes, but is not limited to: line type(s), technical
characteristics (e.g., rotary service), class of service,
current telephone charges, long distance billing record, local service billing
record, directory assistance charges, usage data, and calling
patterns.
(58) Customer trouble
report--Any oral or written report from a customer or user of
telecommunications service received by any telecommunications utility relating
to a physical defect, difficulty, or dissatisfaction with the service provided
by the telecommunications utility's facilities. Each telephone or PBX
switchboard position reported in trouble shall be counted as a separate report
when several items are reported by one customer at the same time, unless the
group of troubles so reported is clearly related to a common cause.
(59) dBrn--A unit used to express noise power
relative to one Pico watt (-90 dBm).
(60) dBrnC--Noise power in dBrn, measured
with C-message weighting.
(61)
dBrnCO--Noise power in dBrnC referred to or measured at a zero transmission
level point.
(62) D-Channel--The
integrated-services-digital-network out-of-band signaling channel.
(63) Dedicated signaling
transport--Transmission of out-of-band signaling information between an access
customer's common channel signaling network and a CTU's signaling transport
point on facilities dedicated to the use of a single customer.
(64) Dedicated 9-1-1 trunk--Refers to either:
(A) a single purpose telephone circuit, or
Internet Protocol (IP) equivalent, that originates at a CTU's (CTU's) switching
office or point of presence and connects to a port of termination at an E9-1-1
selective router, 9-1-1 tandem, IP-based 9-1-1 system, or next generation 9-1-1
system, as described to the CTU by the appropriate 9-1-1 administrative entity
or entities in its 9-1-1 service arrangement requirements for each applicable
rate center (direct dedicated 9-1-1 trunk); or
(B) any other single purpose telephone
circuit, or IP equivalent, that is used by a CTU to provide 9-1-1 service
consistent with the 9-1-1 administrative entity's or entities' 9-1-1 service
arrangement requirements that does not connect directly to a port of
termination as described in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph (indirect
dedicated 9-1-1 trunk). A direct dedicated 9-1-1 trunk includes transport, port
usage, and termination.
(65) Default routing--The capability to route
a 9-1-1 call to a designated public safety answering point when the incoming
9-1-1 call cannot be selectively routed due to an automatic number
identification failure or other cause.
(66) Depreciation expenses--The charges based
on the depreciation accrual rates designed to spread the cost recovery of the
property over its economic life.
(67) Deregulated company--An incumbent local
exchange company (ILEC) for which all of the company's markets have been
deregulated.
(68) Direct-trunked
transport--Transmission of traffic between the serving wire center and another
CTU's office, without intermediate switching. It is charged on a flat-rate
basis.
(69) Disconnection of
telephone service--The event after which a customer's telephone number is
deleted from the central office switch and databases.
(70) Discretionary services (DS)--Those
services as defined in the Public Utility Regulatory Act §58.101, and any
other service the commission subsequently categorizes as a discretionary
service.
(71) Distance
learning--Instruction, learning, and training that is transmitted from one site
to one or more sites by telecommunications services that are used by an
educational institution predominantly for such instruction, learning, or
training--including: video, data, voice, and electronic information.
(72) Distribution lines--Those lines from
which the end user may be provided direct service.
(73) Dominant carrier--A provider of a
communication service provided wholly or partly over a telephone system who the
commission determines has sufficient market power in a telecommunications
market to control prices for that service in that market in a manner adverse to
the public interest. The term includes a provider who provided local exchange
telephone service within certificated exchange areas on September 1, 1995, as
to that service and as to any other service for which a competitive alternative
is not available in a particular geographic market. In addition with respect
to:
(A) intraLATA long distance message
telecommunications service originated by dialing the access code "1-plus," the
term includes a provider of local exchange telephone service in a certificated
exchange area for whom the use of that access code for the origination of
"1-plus" intraLATA calls in the exchange area is exclusive; and
(B) interexchange services, the term does not
include an interexchange carrier that is not a certificated local exchange
company.
(74) Dominant
certificated telecommunications utility (DCTU)--A CTU that is also a dominant
carrier. Unless clearly indicated otherwise, the rules applicable to a DCTU
apply specifically to only those services for which the DCTU is
dominant.
(75) Dual-party relay
service--A service using oral and printed translations, by either a person or
an automated device, between hearing- or speech-impaired individuals who use
telecommunications devices for the deaf, computers, or similar automated
devices, and others who do not have such equipment.
(76) Educational institution--Accredited
primary or secondary schools owned or operated by state and local government
entities or by private entities; institutions of higher education as defined by
the Texas Education Code, §
61.003(13);
the Texas Education Agency, its successors and assigns; regional education
service centers established and operated pursuant to the Texas Education Code,
Chapter 8; and the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, its successors
and assigns.
(77) Electing local
exchange company (LEC)--A CTU electing to be regulated under the terms of the
Public Utility Regulatory Act, Chapter 58.
(78) Electric utility--Except as provided in
Chapter 25, Subchapter I, Division 1 of this title (relating to Open-Access
Comparable Transmission Service for Electrical Utilities in the Electric
Reliability Council of Texas), an electric utility is: A person or river
authority that owns or operates for compensation in this state equipment or
facilities to produce, generate, transmit, distribute, sell, or furnish
electricity in this state. The term includes a lessee, trustee, or receiver of
an electric utility and a recreational vehicle park owner who does not comply
with Texas Utilities Code, Chapter 184, Subchapter C, with regard to the
metered sale of electricity at the recreational vehicle park. The term does not
include:
(A) a municipal
corporation;
(B) a qualifying
facility;
(C) a power generation
company;
(D) an exempt wholesale
generator;
(E) a power
marketer;
(F) a corporation
described by Public Utility Regulatory Act §32.053 to the extent the
corporation sells electricity exclusively at wholesale and not to the ultimate
consumer;
(G) an electric
cooperative;
(H) a retail electric
provider;
(I) the state of Texas or
an agency of the state; or
(J) a
person not otherwise an electric utility who:
(i) furnishes an electric service or
commodity only to itself, its employees, or its tenants as an incident of
employment or tenancy, if that service or commodity is not resold to or used by
others;
(ii) owns or operates in
this state equipment or facilities to produce, generate, transmit, distribute,
sell or furnish electric energy to an electric utility, if the equipment or
facilities are used primarily to produce and generate electric energy for
consumption by that person; or
(iii) owns or operates in this state a
recreational vehicle park that provides metered electric service in accordance
with Texas Utilities Code, Chapter 184, Subchapter C.
(79) Element--Unbundled network
elements, including: interconnection, physical-collocation, and
virtual-collocation elements.
(80)
Eligible telecommunications provider (ETP) service area--The geographic area,
determined by the commission, containing high cost rural areas which are
eligible for Texas Universal Service Funds support under §
26.403 or §
26.404 of this title (relating to
Texas High Cost Universal Service Plan (THCUSP) and Small and Rural Incumbent
Local Exchange Company (ILEC) Universal Service Plan).
(81) Embedded customer premises
equipment--All customer premises equipment owned by a telecommunications
utility, including inventory, which was tariffed or subject to the separations
process of January 1, 1983.
(82)
Emergency service number (ESN)--A three to five digit number representing a
unique combination of emergency service agencies designated to serve a specific
range of addresses within a particular geographic area. The ESN facilitates any
required selective routing and selective transfer to the appropriate public
safety answering point and the dispatching of the proper service
agencies.
(83) Emergency service
zone (ESZ)--A geographic area that has common law enforcement, fire, and
emergency medical services personnel that respond to 9-1-1 calls.
(84) End user choice--A system that allows
the automatic routing of interexchange, operator-assisted calls to the billed
party's chosen carrier without the use of access codes.
(85) Enhanced service provider--A company
that offers computer-based services over transmission facilities to provide the
customer with value-added telephone services.
(86) Entrance facilities--The transmission
path between the access customer's (such as an interexchange carrier) point of
demarcation and the serving wire center.
(87) Equal access--Access which is equal in
type, quality and price to Feature Group C, and which has unbundled rates. From
an end user's perspective, equal access is characterized by the availability of
"1-plus" dialing with the end user's carrier of choice.
(88) Exchange area--The geographic territory
delineated as an exchange area by official commission boundary maps. An
exchange area usually embraces a city or town and its environs. There is
usually a uniform set of charges for telecommunications service within the
exchange area. An exchange area may be served by more than one central office
and/or one certificated telephone utility. An exchange area may also be
referred to as an exchange.
(89)
Exempt Carrier--A nondominant telecommunications utility that satisfies any of
the criteria of PURA §52.154.
(90) Expenses--Costs incurred in the
provision of services that are expensed, rather than capitalized, in accordance
with the Uniform System of Accounts applicable to the carrier.
(91) Experimental service--A new service that
is proposed to be offered on a temporary basis for a specified period not to
exceed one year from the date the service is first provided to any
customer.
(92) Extended area
service (EAS)--A telephone switching and trunking arrangement which provides
for optional calling service by DCTUs within a local access and transport area
and between two contiguous exchanges or between an exchange and a contiguous
metropolitan exchange local calling area. For purposes of this definition, a
metropolitan exchange local calling area shall include all exchanges having
local or mandatory EAS calling throughout all portions of any of the following
exchanges: Austin metropolitan exchange, Corpus Christi metropolitan exchange,
Dallas metropolitan exchange, Fort Worth metropolitan exchange, Houston
metropolitan exchange, San Antonio metropolitan exchange, or Waco metropolitan
exchange. EAS is provided at rate increments in addition to local exchange
rates, rather than at toll message charges.
(93) Extended local calling service
(ELCS)--Service provided pursuant to §
26.219 and §
26.221 of this title (relating to
Administration of Expanded Local Calling Requests; and Applications to
Establish or Increase Expanded Local Calling Service Surcharges).
(94) E911 or E9-1-1--9-1-1 service that is
capable of providing automatic number identification, automatic location
identification, selective routing, and selective transfer.
(95) Facilities--All the plant and equipment
of a public utility, including all tangible and intangible real and personal
property without limitation, and any and all means and instrumentalities in any
manner owned, operated, leased, licensed, used, controlled, furnished, or
supplied for, by, or in connection with the business of any public utility,
including any construction work in progress allowed by the
commission.
(96) Facilities-based
provider--A telecommunications provider that provides telecommunications
services using facilities that it owns or leases or a combination of facilities
that it owns and leases, including unbundled network elements.
(97) Foreign exchange (FX)--Exchange service
furnished by means of a circuit connecting a customer's station to a primary
serving office of another exchange.
(98) Foreign serving office (FSO)--Exchange
service furnished by means of a circuit connecting a customer's station to a
serving office of the same exchange but outside of the serving office area in
which the station is located.
(99)
Forward-looking common costs--Economic costs efficiently incurred in providing
a group of elements or services that cannot be attributed directly to
individual elements or services.
(100) Forward-looking economic cost--The sum
of the total element long-run incremental cost of an element and a reasonable
allocation of its forward-looking common costs.
(101) Forward-looking economic cost per
unit--The forward-looking economic cost of the element as defined in this
section, divided by a reasonable projection of the sum of the total number of
units of the element that the DCTU is likely to provide to requesting
telecommunications carriers and the total number of units of the element that
the DCTU is likely to use in offering its own services, during a reasonable
time period.
(102) Geographic
scope--The geographic area in which the holder of a COA or of a SPCOA is
authorized to provide service.
(103) Grade of service--The number of
customers a line is designated to serve.
(104) Health Center--A federally qualified
health center service delivery site.
(105) Hearing--Any proceeding at which
evidence is taken on the merits of the matters at issue, not including
prehearing conferences.
(106)
Hearing carryover--A technology that allows an individual who is
speech-impaired to hear the other party in a telephone conversation and to use
specialized telecommunications devices to send communications through the
telecommunications relay service operator.
(107) High cost area--A geographic area for
which the costs established using a forward-looking economic cost methodology
exceed the benchmark levels established by the commission.
(108) High cost assistance (HCA)--A program
administered by the commission in accordance with the provisions of §
26.403 of this title.
(109) Identity--The name, address, telephone
number, and/or facsimile number of a person, whether natural, partnership,
municipal corporation, cooperative corporation, corporation, association,
governmental subdivision, or state agency and the relationship of the person to
the entity being represented.
(110)
Impulse noise--Any momentary occurrence of the noise on a channel significantly
exceeding the normal noise peaks. It is evaluated by counting the number of
occurrences that exceed a threshold. This noise degrades voice and data
transmission.
(111) Incumbent local
exchange company (ILEC)--A local exchange company that had a CCN on September
1, 1995.
(112) Informational
notice--Notice that is filed in connection with nonbasic services, new service
offerings, and pricing and packaging flexibility if required by Public Utility
Regulatory Act Chapter 52, 58, or 59.
(113) Information sharing
program--Instruction, learning, and training that is transmitted from one site
to one or more sites by telecommunications services that are used by a library
predominantly for such instruction, learning, or training, including video,
data, voice, and electronic information.
(114) Integrated services digital network
(ISDN)--A digital network architecture that provides a wide variety of
communications services, a standard set of user-network messages, and
integrated access to the network. Access methods to the ISDN are the Basic Rate
Interface (BRI) and the Primary Rate Interface (PRI).
(115) Interactive multimedia
communications--Real-time, two-way, interactive voice, video, and data
communications conducted over networks that link geographically dispersed
locations. This definition includes interactive communications within or
between buildings on the same campus or library site.
(116) Intercept service--A service
arrangement provided by the local exchange carrier whereby calls placed to a
disconnected or discontinued telephone number are intercepted and the calling
party is informed by an operator or by a recording that the called telephone
number has been disconnected, discontinued, changed to another number, or
otherwise is not in service.
(117)
Interconnection--Generally means: The point in a network where a customer's
transmission facilities interface with the dominant carrier's network under the
provisions of this section. More particularly it means: The termination of
local traffic including basic telecommunications service as delineated in
§
26.403 of this title or integrated
services digital network (ISDN) as defined in this section and/or EAS/ELCS
traffic of a CTU using the local access lines of another CTU, as described in
§
26.272(d)(4)(A)
of this title (relating to Interconnection). Interconnection shall include
non-discriminatory access to signaling systems, databases, facilities and
information as required to ensure interoperability of networks and efficient,
timely provision of services to customers without permitting access to network
proprietary information or customer proprietary network information, as defined
in this section, unless otherwise permitted in §
26.272 of this title.
(118) Interconnector--A customer that
interfaces with the dominant carrier's network under the provisions of §
26.271 of this title (relating to
Expanded Interconnection).
(119)
Interexchange carrier (IXC)--A carrier providing any means of transporting
intrastate telecommunications messages between local exchanges, but not solely
within local exchanges, in the State of Texas. The term may include a CTU or
CTU affiliate to the extent that it is providing such service. An entity is not
an IXC solely because of:
(A) the furnishing,
or furnishing and maintenance of a private system;
(B) the manufacture, distribution,
installation, or maintenance of customer premises equipment;
(C) the provision of services authorized
under the FCC's Public Mobile Radio Service and Rural Radio Service rules;
or
(D) the provision of shared
tenant service.
(120)
Internet Protocol (IP)--A data communication protocol used in communicating
data from one computer to another on the Internet or other networks.
(121) Internet Protocol enabled service--A
service, capability, functionality, or application that uses Internet Protocol
or a successor protocol to allow an end user to send or receive a data, video,
or voice communication in Internet Protocol or a successor protocol.
(122) Interoffice trunks--Those
communications circuits which connect central offices.
(123) IntraLATA equal access--The ability of
a caller to complete a toll call in a local access and transport area (LATA)
using his or her provider of choice by dialing "1" or "0" plus an area code and
telephone number.
(124)
Intrastate--Refers to communications which both originate and terminate within
Texas state boundaries.
(125) Least
cost technology--The technology or mix of technologies that would be chosen in
the long run as the most economically efficient choice. The choice of least
cost technologies, however, shall:
(A) be
restricted to technologies that are currently available on the market and for
which vendor prices can be obtained;
(B) be consistent with the level of output
necessary to satisfy current demand levels for all services using the basic
network function in question; and
(C) be consistent with overall network design
and topology requirements.
(126) License--The whole or part of any
commission permit, certificate, approval, registration, or similar form of
permission required by law.
(127)
Licensing--The commission process respecting the granting, denial, renewal,
revocation, suspension, annulment, withdrawal, or amendment of a
license.
(128) Lifeline Service--A
program certified by the Federal Communications Commission to provide for the
reduction or waiver of the federal subscriber line charge for residential
consumers.
(129) Line--A circuit or
channel extending from a central office to the customer's location to provide
telecommunications service. One line may serve one customer, or all customers
served by a multiparty line.
(130)
Local access and transport area (LATA)--A geographic area established for the
provision and administration of communications service. It encompasses one or
more designated exchanges, which are grouped to serve common social, economic
and other purposes. For purposes of these rules, market areas, as used and
defined in the Modified Final Judgment and the GTE Final Judgment, are
encompassed in the term local access and transport area.
(131) Local call--A call within the
certificated telephone utility's toll-free calling area including calls which
are made toll-free through a mandatory EAS or expanded local calling (ELC)
proceeding.
(132) Local calling
area--The area within which telecommunications service is furnished to
customers under a specific schedule of exchange rates. A local calling area may
include more than one exchange area.
(133) Local exchange carrier (LEC)--A
telecommunications utility that has been granted either a certificate of
convenience and necessity or a COA to provide local exchange telephone service,
basic local telecommunications service, or switched access service within the
state. A local exchange company is also referred to as a local exchange
carrier.
(134) Local exchange
telephone service or local exchange service--A telecommunications service
provided within an exchange to establish connections between customer premises
within the exchange, including connections between a customer premises and a
long distance provider serving the exchange. The term includes tone dialing
service, service connection charges, and directory assistance services offered
in connection with basic local telecommunications service and interconnection
with other service providers. The term does not include the following services,
whether offered on an intra-exchange or inter-exchange basis:
(A) central office based PBX-type services
for systems of 75 stations or more;
(B) billing and collection
services;
(C) high-speed private
line services of 1.544 megabits or greater;
(D) customized services;
(E) private line or virtual private line
services;
(F) resold or shared
local exchange telephone services if permitted by tariff;
(G) dark fiber services;
(H) non-voice data transmission service
offered as a separate service and not as a component of basic local
telecommunications service;
(I)
dedicated or virtually dedicated access services;
(J) a competitive exchange service;
or
(K) any other service the
commission determines is not a "local exchange telephone service."
(135) Local message--A completed
call between customer access lines located within the same local calling
area.
(136) Local message
charge--The charge that applies for a completed telephone call that is made
when the calling customer access line and the customer access line to which the
connection is established are both within the same local calling area, and a
local message charge is applicable.
(137) Local service charge--The charge for
furnishing facilities to enable a customer to send or receive
telecommunications within the local calling area. This local calling area may
include more than one exchange area.
(138) Local telecommunications traffic--
(A) Telecommunications traffic between a DCTU
and a telecommunications carrier other than a commercial mobile radio service
(CMRS) provider that originates and terminates within the mandatory single or
multi-exchange local calling area of a DCTU including the mandatory EAS areas
served by the DCTU; or
(B)
Telecommunications traffic between a DCTU and a CMRS provider that, at the
beginning of the call, originates and terminates within the same major trading
area.
(139) Long distance
telecommunications service--That part of the total communication service
rendered by a telecommunications utility which is furnished between customers
in different local calling areas in accordance with the rates and regulations
specified in the utility's tariff.
(140) Long run--A time period long enough to
be consistent with the assumption that the company is in the planning stage and
all of its inputs are variable and avoidable.
(141) Long run incremental cost (LRIC)--The
change in total costs of the company of producing an increment of output in the
long run when the company uses least cost technology. The LRIC should exclude
any costs that, in the long run, are not brought into existence as a direct
result of the increment of output.
(142) Mandatory minimum standards--The
standards established by the Federal Communications Commission, outlining basic
mandatory telecommunication relay services.
(143) Market--An exchange in which an
incumbent local exchange company provides residential local exchange telephone
service.
(144) Master street
address guide (MSAG)--A database maintained by each 9-1-1 administrative entity
of street names and house number ranges within their associated communities
defining emergency service zones and their associated emergency service numbers
to enable proper routing of 9-1-1 calls.
(145) Meet point billing--An access billing
arrangement for services to access customers when local transport is jointly
provided by more than one CTU.
(146) Message--A completed customer telephone
call.
(147) Message rate service--A
form of local exchange service under which all originated local messages are
measured and charged for in accordance with the utility's tariff.
(148) Minor rate change--A change, including
the restructuring of rates of existing services, that decreases the rates or
revenues of the small local exchange company (SLEC) or that, together with any
other rate or proposed or approved tariff changes in the 12 months preceding
the date on which the proposed change will take effect, results in an increase
of the SLEC's total regulated intrastate gross annual revenues by not more than
5.0%. Further, with regard to a change to a basic local access line rate, a
minor change may not, together with any other change to that rate that went
into effect during the 12 months preceding the proposed effective date of the
proposed change, result in an increase of more than 50%.
(149) Municipality--A city, incorporated
village, or town, existing, created, or organized under the general, home rule,
or special laws of the state.
(150)
National integrated services digital network (ISDN)--The standards and services
promulgated for integrated services digital network by Bellcore.
(151) Negotiating party--A CTU or other
entity with which a requesting CTU seeks to interconnect in order to complete
all telephone calls made by or placed to a customer of the requesting
CTU.
(152) Next generation 9-1-1
system (NG9-1-1 system)--A system of securely managed IP-based 9-1-1 networks
and elements that augment and are capable of interoperating with present-day
E9-1-1 features and functions and add new capabilities. NG9-1-1 may replace or
complement the present E9-1-1 system. NG9-1-1 is designed to provide access to
emergency services from all sources, and to provide multimedia data
capabilities for public safety answering positions and other emergency service
organizations.
(153) New
service--Any service not offered on a tariffed basis prior to the date of the
application relating to such service and specifically excludes basic local
telecommunications service including local measured service. If a proposed
service could serve as an alternative or replacement for a service offered
prior to the date of the new-service application and does not provide
significant improvements (other than price) over, or significant additional
services not available under, a service offered prior to the date of such
application, it shall not be considered a new service.
(154) Nonbasic services--Those services
identified in Public Utility Regulatory Act §58.151, including any service
reclassified by the commission pursuant to Public Utility Regulatory Act
§58.024.
(155)
Non-discriminatory--Type of treatment that is not less favorable than that an
interconnecting CTU provides to itself or its affiliates or other
CTUs.
(156) Non-dominant
certificated telecommunications utility (NCTU)--A CTU that is not a DCTU and
has been granted a CCN (after September 1, 1995, in an area already
certificated to a DCTU), a COA, or a SPCOA to provide local exchange
service.
(157) Nondominant
carrier--
(A) An interexchange
telecommunications carrier (including a reseller of interexchange
telecommunications services).
(B)
Any of the following that is not a dominant carrier:
(i) a specialized communications common
carrier;
(ii) any other reseller of
communications;
(iii) any other
communications carrier that conveys, transmits, or receives communications in
whole or in part over a telephone system; or
(iv) a provider of operator services that is
not also a subscriber.
(C) A deregulated company that holds a
COA.
(158) North American
Numbering Plan (NANP)--Use of 10-digit dialing in the format of a 3-digit "NPA"
followed by a 3-digit "NXX" and a 4-digit line number, NPA-NXX-XXX.
(159) Numbering plan area (NPA)--The first
three digits of a ten-digit North American Numbering Plan (NANP) local
telephone number uniquely identifying a Numbering Plan area. Generally referred
to as the area code of a NANP telephone number.
(160) NXX--A 3-digit code in which N is any
digit 2 through 9 and X is any digit 0 through 9. Typically used in describing
the "Exchange Code" fields of a North American Numbering Plan telephone
number.
(161) Open network
architecture--The overall design of an ILEC's network facilities and services
to permit all users of the network, including the enhanced services operations
of an ILEC and its competitors, to interconnect to specific basic network
functions on an unbundled and non-discriminatory basis.
(162) Operator service--Any service using
live operator or automated operator functions for the handling of telephone
service, such as local collect, toll calling via collect, third number billing,
credit card, and calling card services. The transmission of "1-800" and "1-888"
numbers, where the called party has arranged to be billed, is not operator
service.
(163) Operator service
provider (OSP)--Any person or entity that provides operator services by using
either live or automated operator functions. When more than one entity is
involved in processing an operator service call, the party setting the rates
shall be considered to be the OSP. However, subscribers to customer-owned pay
telephone service shall not be deemed to be OSPs.
(164) Originating line screening (OLS)--A two
digit code passed by the local switching system with the automatic number
identification (ANI) at the beginning of a call that provides information about
the originating line.
(165)
Out-of-service trouble report--An initial customer trouble report in which
there is complete interruption of incoming or outgoing local exchange service.
On multiple line services a failure of one central office line or a failure in
common equipment affecting all lines is considered out of service. If an
extension line failure does not result in the complete inability to receive or
initiate calls, the report is not considered to be out of service.
(166) P.01 grade of service--A standard of
service quality intended to measure the probability (P), expressed as a decimal
fraction, of a telephone call being blocked. P.01 is the grade of service
reflecting the probability that one call out of one hundred during the average
busy house will be blocked.
(167)
Packaged Service--The combination of any regulated service with any other
regulated or unregulated service or with any service of an affiliate, offered
to customers at a packaged rate or rates.
(168) Partial deregulation--The ability of a
cooperative to offer new services on an optional basis and/or change its rates
and tariffs under the provisions of the Public Utility Regulatory Act,
§§53.351 - 53.359.
(169)
Pay-per-call-information services--Services that allow a caller to dial a
specified 1-900-XXX-XXXX or 976-XXXX number. Such services routinely deliver,
for a predetermined (sometimes time-sensitive) fee, a pre-recorded or live
message or interactive program. Usually a telecommunications utility will
transport the call and bill the end-user on behalf of the information
provider.
(170) Pay telephone
access service (PTAS)--A service offered by a CTU which provides a two-way, or
optionally, a one-way originating-only business access line composed of the
serving central office line equipment, all outside plant facilities needed to
connect the serving central office with the customer premises, and the network
interface; this service is sold to pay telephone service providers.
(171) Pay telephone service (PTS)--A
telecommunications service utilizing any coin, coinless, credit card reader, or
cordless instrument that can be used by members of the general public, or
business patrons, employees, and/or visitors of the premises' owner, provided
that the end user pays for local or toll calls from such instrument on a per
call basis. Pay per call telephone service provided to inmates of confinement
facilities is PTS. For purposes of this section, coinless telephones provided
in guest rooms by a hotel/motel are not pay telephones. A telephone that is
primarily used by business patrons, employees, and/or visitors of the premises'
owner is not a pay telephone if all local calls and "1-800" and "1-888" type
calls from such telephone are free to the end user.
(172) Per-call blocking--A telecommunications
service provided by a telecommunications provider that prevents the
transmission of calling party information to a called party on a call-by-call
basis.
(173) Per-line blocking--A
telecommunications service provided by a telecommunications utility that
prevents the transmission of calling party information to a called party on
every call, unless the calling party acts affirmatively to release calling
party information.
(174) Percent
interstate usage (PIU)--An access customer-specific ratio or ratios determined
by dividing interstate access minutes by total access minutes. The specific
ratio shall be determined by the CTU unless the CTU's network is incapable of
determining the jurisdiction of the access minutes. A PIU establishes the
jurisdiction of switched access usage for determining rates charged to switched
access customers and affects the allocation of switched access revenue and
costs by CTUs between the interstate and intrastate jurisdictions.
(175) Person--Any natural person,
partnership, municipal corporation, cooperative corporation, corporation,
association, governmental subdivision, or public or private organization of any
character other than an agency.
(176) Pleading--A written document submitted
by a party, or a person seeking to participate in a proceeding, setting forth
allegations of fact, claims, requests for relief, legal argument, and/or other
matters relating to a proceeding.
(177) Prepaid local telephone service
(PLTS)--Prepaid local telephone service means:
(A) voice grade dial tone residential service
consisting of flat rate service or local measured service, if chosen by the
customer and offered by the DCTU;
(B) if applicable, mandatory services,
including EAS, extended metropolitan service, or ELCS;
(C) tone dialing service;
(D) access to 911 service;
(E) access to dual party relay
service;
(F) the ability to report
service problems seven days a week;
(G) access to business office;
(H) primary directory listing;
(I) toll blocking service; and
(J) non-published service and non-listed
service at the customer's option.
(178) Premises--A tract of land or real
estate including buildings and other appurtenances thereon.
(179) Pricing flexibility--Discounts and
other forms of pricing flexibility may not be preferential, prejudicial, or
discriminatory. Pricing flexibility includes:
(A) customer specific contracts;
(B) volume, term, and discount
pricing;
(C) zone density pricing,
with zone to be defined as an exchange;
(D) packaging of services; and
(E) other promotional pricing
flexibility.
(180)
Primary interexchange carrier (PIC)--The provider chosen by a customer to carry
that customer's toll calls.
(181)
Primary interexchange carrier (PIC) freeze indicator--An indicator that the end
user has directed the CTU to make no changes in the end user's PIC.
(182) Primary rate interface (PRI) integrated
services digital network (ISDN)--One of the access methods to ISDN, the
1.544-Mbps PRI comprises either twenty-three 64 Kbps B-channels and one 64 Kbps
D-channel (23B+D) or twenty-four 64 Kbps B-channels (24B) when the associated
call signaling is provided by another PRI in the group.
(183) Primary service--The initial provision
of voice grade access between the customer's premises and the switched
telecommunications network. This includes the initial connection to a new
customer or the move of an existing customer to a new premises but does not
include complex services.
(184)
Print translations--The temporary storage of a message in an operator's screen
during the actual process of relaying a conversation.
(185) Privacy issue--An issue that arises
when a telecommunications provider proposes to offer a new telecommunications
service or feature that would result in a change in the outflow of information
about a customer. The term privacy issue is to be construed broadly. It
includes, but is not limited to, changes in the following:
(A) the type of information about a customer
that is released;
(B) the customers
about whom information is released;
(C) the entity or entities to whom the
information about a customer is released;
(D) the technology used to convey the
information;
(E) the time at which
the information is conveyed; and
(F) any other change in the collection, use,
storage, or release of information.
(186) Private line--A transmission path that
is dedicated to a customer and that is not connected to a switching facility of
a telecommunications utility, except that a dedicated transmission path between
switching facilities of interexchange carriers shall be considered a private
line.
(187) Proceeding--A hearing,
investigation, inquiry, or other procedure for finding facts or making a
decision. The term includes a denial of relief or dismissal of a complaint. It
may be rulemaking or non-rulemaking; rate setting or non-rate
setting.
(188) Promotional rate--A
temporary tariff, fare, toll, rental or other compensation charged by a
certificated telecommunications utility (CTU) to new or new and existing
customers and designed to induce customers to test a service. A promotional
rate shall incorporate a reduction or a waiver of some rate element in the
tariffed rates of the service, or a reduction or waiver of the service's
installation charge and/or service connection charges, and shall not
incorporate any charge for discontinuance of the service by the customer. Such
rates may not be offered for basic local telecommunications service, including
local measured service.
(189)
Promotional Service--A service offered to customers at a promotional rate or
rates.
(190) Provider of pay
telephone service--The entity that purchases PTAS from a CTU and registers with
the Public Utility Commission as a provider of PTS to end users.
(191) Public safety answering point (PSAP)--A
continuously operated communications facility established or authorized by
local government authorities that answers 9-1-1 calls originating within a
given service area, as further defined in Texas Health and Safety Code Chapters
771 and 772. The term includes an emergency communications center.
(192) Public utility or utility--A person or
river authority that owns or operates for compensation in this state equipment
or facilities to convey, transmit, or receive communications over a telephone
system as a dominant carrier. The term includes a lessee, trustee, or receiver
of any of those entities, or a combination of those entities. The term does not
include a municipal corporation. A person is not a public utility solely
because the person:
(A) furnishes or furnishes
and maintains a private system;
(B)
manufactures, distributes, installs, or maintains customer premises
communications equipment and accessories; or
(C) furnishes a telecommunications service or
commodity only to itself, its employees, or its tenants as an incident of
employment or tenancy, if that service or commodity is not resold to or used by
others.
(193) Public
Utility Regulatory Act (PURA)--The enabling statute for the Public Utility
Commission of Texas, located in the Texas Utilities Code Annotated,
§§11.001 - 66.016 (West 2007, Supplement 2013).
(194) Qualifying low-income consumer--A
consumer that participates in one of the following programs: Medicaid, food
stamps, Supplemental Security Income, federal public housing assistance, or
Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program.
(195) Qualifying services--
(A) residential flat rate basic local
exchange service;
(B) residential
local exchange access service; and
(C) residential local area calling
usage.
(196)
Rate--Includes:
(A) any compensation, tariff,
charge, fare, toll, rental, or classification that is directly or indirectly
demanded, observed, charged, or collected by a public utility for a service,
product, or commodity, described in the definition of utility in the Public
Utility Regulatory Act §31.002 or §51.002; and
(B) a rule, practice, or contract affecting
the compensation, tariff, charge, fare, toll, rental, or
classification.
(197)
Reciprocal compensation--An arrangement between two carriers in which each of
the two carriers receives compensation from the other carrier for the transport
and termination on each carrier's network facilities of local
telecommunications traffic that originates on the network facilities of the
other carrier.
(198)
Reclassification area--The geographic area within the electing ILEC's
territory, consisting of one or more exchange areas, for which it seeks
reclassification of a service.
(199) Redirect the call--A procedure used by
operator service providers (OSPs) that transmits a signal back to the
originating telephone instrument that causes the instrument to disconnect the
OSP's connection and to redial the digits originally dialed by the caller
directly to the local exchange carrier's network.
(200) Regional planning commission--The
meaning established in Texas Health and Safety Code §
771.001(10).
(201) Regulatory authority--In accordance
with the context where it is found, either the commission or the governing body
of a municipality.
(202) Relay
Texas Advisory Committee (RTAC)--The committee authorized by the Public Utility
Regulatory Act, §56.110 and 1997 Texas General Laws Chapter 149.
(203) Relay Texas--The name by which
telecommunications relay service in Texas is known.
(204) Relay Texas administrator--The
individual employed by the commission to oversee the administration of
statewide telecommunications relay service.
(205) Repeated trouble report--A customer
trouble report regarding a specific line or circuit occurring within 30 days or
one calendar month of a previously cleared trouble report on the same line or
circuit.
(206) Residual charge--The
per-minute charge designed to account for historical contribution to joint and
common costs made by switched transport services.
(207) Retail service--A telecommunications
service is considered a retail service when it is provided to residential or
business end users and the use of the service is other than resale. Each
tariffed or contract offering which a customer may purchase to the exclusion of
other offerings shall be considered a service. For example: the various mileage
bands for standard toll services are rate elements, not services; however,
individual optional calling plans that can be purchased individually and which
are offered as alternatives to each other are services, not rate
elements.
(208)
Return-on-assets--After-tax net operating income divided by total
assets.
(209) Reversal of partial
deregulation--The ability of a minimum of 10% of the members of a partially
deregulated cooperative to request, in writing, that a vote be conducted to
determine whether members prefer to reverse partial deregulation. Ten percent
shall be calculated based upon the total number of members of record as of the
calendar month preceding receipt of the request from members for reversal of
partial deregulation.
(210) Rule--A
statement of general applicability that implements, interprets, or prescribes
law or policy, or describes the procedure or practice requirements of the
commission. The term includes the amendment or repeal of a prior rule but does
not include statements concerning only the internal management or organization
of the commission and not affecting private rights or procedures.
(211) Rulemaking proceeding--A proceeding
conducted pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act, Texas Government Code,
Chapter 2001, Subchapter B, to adopt, amend, or repeal a commission
rule.
(212) Rural incumbent local
exchange company (ILEC)--An ILEC that qualifies as a "rural telephone company"
as defined in 47 United
States Code § 3(37)
and/or 47 United States Code
§
251(f)(2).
(213) Selective routing--The feature provided
with 9-1-1 or 311 service by which 9-1-1 or 311 calls are automatically
directed to the appropriate answering point for serving the location from which
the call originates.
(214)
Selective transfer--A public safety answering point initiating the routing of a
9-1-1 call to a response agency by operation of one of several buttons
typically designated as police, fire, and emergency medical, based on the
emergency service number of the caller.
(215) Separation--The division of plant,
revenues, expenses, taxes, and reserves applicable to exchange or local service
if these items are used in common to provide public utility service to both
local exchange telephone service and other service, such as interstate or
intrastate toll service.
(216)
Service--Has its broadest and most inclusive meaning. The term includes any act
performed, anything supplied, and any facilities used or supplied by a public
utility in the performance of the utility's duties under the Public Utility
Regulatory Act to its patrons, employees, other public utilities, and the
public. The term also includes the interchange or facilities between two or
more public utilities. The term does not include the printing, distribution, or
sale of advertising in a telephone directory.
(217) Service connection charge--A charge
designed to recover the costs of non-recurring activities associated with
connection of local exchange telephone service.
(218) Service order system--The system used
by a telecommunications provider that, among other functions, tracks customer
service requests and billing data.
(219) Service provider--Any entity that
offers a product or service to a customer and that directly or indirectly
charges to or collects from a customer's bill an amount for the product or
service on a customer's bill received from a billing telecommunications
utility.
(220) Service provider
certificate of operating authority (SPCOA) reseller--A holder of a service
provider certificate of operating authority that uses only resold
telecommunications services provided by an ILEC or by a COA holder or by a
SPCOA holder.
(221) Service
restoral charge--A charge applied by the DCTU to restore service to a
customer's telephone line after it has been suspended by the DCTU.
(222) Serving wire center (SWC)--The CTU
designated central office which serves the access customer's point of
demarcation.
(223) Signaling for
tandem switching--The carrier identification code (CIC) and the OZZ code or
equivalent information needed to perform tandem switching functions. The CIC
identifies the interexchange carrier and the OZZ digits identify the call type
and thus the interexchange carrier trunk to which traffic should be
routed.
(224) Small certificated
telecommunications utility (CTU)--A CTU with fewer than 2.0% of the nation's
subscriber lines installed in the aggregate nationwide.
(225) Small local exchange company
(SLEC)--Any incumbent CTU as of September 1, 1995, that has fewer than 31,000
access lines in service in this state, including the access lines of all
affiliated incumbent local exchange companies within the state, or a telephone
cooperative organized pursuant to the Telephone Cooperative Act, Texas
Utilities Code Annotated, Chapter 162.
(226) Small incumbent local exchange company
(Small ILEC)--An ILEC that is a cooperative corporation or has, together with
all affiliated ILECs, fewer than 31,000 access lines in service in
Texas.
(227) Spanish speaking
person--A person who speaks any dialect of the Spanish language exclusively or
as their primary language.
(228)
Special access--A transmission path connecting customer designated premises to
each other either directly or through a hub or hubs where bridging,
multiplexing or network reconfiguration service functions are performed and
includes all exchange access not requiring switching performed by the dominant
carrier's end office switches.
(229) Specialized Telecommunications
Assistance Program (STAP)--The program described in §
26.415 of this title (relating to
Specialized Telecommunications Assistance Program (STAP)).
(230) Specialized Telecommunications
Assistance Program (STAP) voucher--A voucher issued by the Texas Department of
Assistive and Rehabilitative Services under the equipment distribution program,
in accordance with its rules, that an eligible individual may use to acquire
eligible specialized telecommunications devices from a vendor of such
equipment.
(231) Stand-alone
costs--The stand-alone costs of an element or service are defined as the
forward-looking costs that an efficient entrant would incur in providing only
that element or service.
(232)
Station--A telephone instrument or other terminal device.
(233) Study area--An incumbent local exchange
company's (ILEC's) existing service area in a given state.
(234) Supplemental
services--Telecommunications features or services offered by a CTU for which
analogous services or products may be available to the customer from a source
other than a DCTU. Supplemental services shall not be construed to include
optional extended area calling plans that a DCTU may offer pursuant to §
26.217 of this title (relating to
Administration of Extended Area Service (EAS) Requests), or pursuant to a final
order of the commission in a proceeding pursuant to the Public Utility
Regulatory Act, Chapter 53.
(235)
Suspension of service--That period during which the customer's telephone line
does not have dial tone but the customer's telephone number is not deleted from
the central office switch and databases.
(236) Switched access--Access service that is
provided by CTUs to access customers and that requires the use of CTU network
switching or common line facilities generally, but not necessarily, for the
origination or termination of interexchange calls. Switched access includes all
forms of transport provided by the CTU over which switched access traffic is
delivered.
(237) Switched access
demand--Switched access minutes of use, or other appropriate measure where not
billed on a minute of use basis, for each switched access rate element,
normalized for out of period billings. For the purposes of this section,
switched access demand shall include minutes of use billed for the local
switching rate element.
(238)
Switched access minutes--The measured or assumed duration of time that a CTU's
network facilities are used by access customers. Access minutes are measured
for the purpose of calculating access charges applicable to access
customers.
(239) Switched
transport--Transmission between a CTU's central office (including
tandem-switching offices) and an interexchange carrier's point of
presence.
(240) Tandem-switched
transport--Transmission of traffic between the serving wire center and another
CTU office that is switched at a tandem switch and charged on a usage
basis.
(241) Tariff--The schedule
of a utility containing all rates, tolls, and charges stated separately by type
or kind of service and the customer class, and the rules and regulations of the
utility stated separately by type or kind of service and the customer
class.
(242) Telecommunications
provider--As defined in the Public Utility Regulatory Act
§51.002(10).
(243)
Telecommunications relay service (TRS)--A service using oral and print
translations by either live or automated means between individuals who are
hearing-impaired or speech-impaired who use specialized telecommunications
devices and others who do not have such devices. Unless specified in the text,
this term shall refer to intrastate telecommunications relay service
only.
(244) Telecommunications
relay service (TRS) carrier--The telecommunications carrier selected by the
commission to provide statewide telecommunications relay service.
(245) Telecommunications utility--
(A) a public utility;
(B) an interexchange telecommunications
carrier, including a reseller of interexchange telecommunications
services;
(C) a specialized
communications common carrier;
(D)
a reseller of communications;
(E) a
communications carrier who conveys, transmits, or receives communications
wholly or partly over a telephone system;
(F) a provider of operator services as
defined by §55.081, unless the provider is a subscriber to customer-owned
PTS; and
(G) a separated affiliate
or an electronic publishing joint venture as defined in the Public Utility
Regulatory Act, Chapter 63.
(246) Telephones intended to be utilized by
the public--Telephones that are accessible to the public, including, but not
limited to, pay telephones, telephones in guest rooms and common areas of
hotels, motels, or other lodging locations, and telephones in hospital patient
rooms.
(247) Telephone
solicitation--An unsolicited telephone call.
(248) Telephone solicitor--A person who makes
or causes to be made a consumer telephone call, including a call made by an
automatic dialing/announcing device.
(249) Test year--The most recent 12 months,
beginning on the first day of a calendar or fiscal year quarter, for which
operating data for a public utility are available.
(250) Texas Universal Service Fund
(TUSF)--The fund authorized by the Public Utility Regulatory Act, §56.021
and 1997 Texas General Laws Chapter 149.
(251) Tier 1 local exchange company--A local
exchange company with annual regulated operating revenues exceeding $100
million.
(252) Title IV-D
Agency--The office of the attorney general for the state of Texas.
(253) Toll blocking--A service provided by
telecommunications carriers that lets consumers elect not to allow the
completion of outgoing toll calls from their telecommunications
channel.
(254) Toll control--A
service provided by telecommunications carriers that allows consumers to
specify a certain amount of toll usage that may be incurred on their
telecommunications channel per month or per billing cycle.
(255) Toll limitation--Denotes both toll
blocking and toll control.
(256)
Total element long-run incremental cost (TELRIC)--The forward-looking cost over
the long run of the total quantity of the facilities and functions that are
directly attributable to, or reasonably identifiable as incremental to, such
element, calculated taking as a given the CTU's provision of other
elements.
(257) Transitioning
company--An incumbent local exchange company for which at least one, but not
all, of the company's markets has been deregulated.
(258) Transport--The transmission and/or any
necessary tandem and/or switching of local telecommunications traffic from the
interconnection point between the two carriers to the terminating carrier's end
office switch that directly serves the called party, or equivalent facility
provided by a carrier other than a DCTU.
(259) Trunk--A circuit facility connecting
two switching systems.
(260)
Two-primary interexchange carrier (Two-PIC) equal access--A method that allows
a telephone subscriber to select one carrier for all 1+ and 0+ interLATA calls
and the same or a different carrier for all 1+ and 0+ intraLATA
calls.
(261) Unauthorized
charge--Any charge on a customer's telephone bill that was not consented to or
verified in compliance with §
26.32 of this title (relating to
Protection Against Unauthorized Billing Charges ("Cramming")).
(262) Unbundling--The disaggregation of the
ILEC's network/service to make available the individual network functions or
features or rate elements used in providing an existing service.
(263) Unit cost--A cost per unit of output
calculated by dividing the total long run incremental cost of production by the
total number of units.
(264) Usage
sensitive blocking--Blocking of a customer's access to services which are
charged on a usage sensitive basis for completed calls. Such calls shall
include, but not be limited to, call return, call trace, and auto
redial.
(265) Virtual private
line--Circuits or bandwidths, between fixed locations, that are available on
demand and that can be dynamically allocated.
(266) Voice carryover--A technology that
allows an individual who is hearing-impaired to speak directly to the other
party in a telephone conversation and to use specialized telecommunications
devices to receive communications through the telecommunications relay service
operator.
(267) Voice over Internet
Protocol (VoIP)--The technology used to transmit voice communications using
Internet Protocol.
(268) Voice over
Internet Protocol service--A service that:
(A)
uses Internet Protocol or a successor protocol to enable a real-time, two-way
voice communication that originates from or terminates to the user's location
in Internet Protocol or a successor protocol;
(B) requires a broadband connection from the
user's location; and
(C) permits a
user generally to receive a call that originates on the public switched
telephone network and to terminate a call to the public switched telephone
network.
(269) Volume
insensitive costs--The costs of providing a basic network function (BNF) that
do not vary with the volume of output of the services that use the
BNF.
(270) Volume sensitive
costs--The costs of providing a basic network function (BNF) that vary with the
volume of output of the services that use the BNF.
(271) Wireless provider--A provider that:
(A) provides commercial mobile radio service
as defined in paragraph (40) of this section; or
(B) utilizes fixed wireless technology to
provide local exchange service.
(272) Wholesale service--A telecommunications
service is considered a wholesale service when it is provided to a
telecommunications utility and the use of the service is to provide a retail
service to residence or business end-user customers.
(273) Working capital requirements--The
additional capital required to fund the increased level of accounts receivable
necessary to provide telecommunications service.
(274) "0-" call--A call made by the caller
dialing the digit "0" and no other digits within five seconds. A "0-" call may
be made after a digit (or digits) to access the local network is (are)
dialed.
(275) "0+" call--A call
made by the caller dialing the digit "0" followed by the terminating telephone
number. On some automated call equipment, a digit or digits may be dialed
between the "0" and the terminating telephone number.
(276) 311 answering point--A communications
facility that:
(A) is operated, at a minimum,
during normal business hours;
(B)
is assigned the responsibility to receive 311 calls and, as appropriate, to
dispatch the non-emergency police or other governmental services, or to
transfer or relay 311 calls to the governmental entity;
(C) is the first point of reception by a
governmental entity of a 311 call; and
(D) serves the jurisdictions in which it is
located or other participating jurisdictions.
(277) 311 service--A telecommunications
service provided by a certificated telecommunications provider through which
the end user of a public telephone system has the ability to reach
non-emergency police and other governmental services by dialing the digits
3-1-1. 311 service must contain the selective routing feature or other
equivalent state-of-the-art feature.
(278) 311 service request--A written request
from a governmental entity to a CTU requesting the provision of 311 service. A
311 service request must:
(A) be in
writing;
(B) contain an outline of
the program the governmental entity will pursue to adequately educate the
public on the 311 service;
(C)
contain an outline from the governmental entity for implementation of 311
service;
(D) contain a description
of the likely source of funding for the 311 service (i.e., from general
revenues, special appropriations, etc.); and
(E) contain a listing of the specific
departments or agencies of the governmental entity that will actually provide
the non-emergency police and other governmental services.
(279) 311 system--A system of processing 311
calls.
(280) 9-1-1 administrative
entity--A regional planning commission as defined in Texas Health and Safety
Code §
771.001(10)
or an emergency communication district as defined in Texas Health and Safety
Code §
771.001(3).
(281) 9-1-1 database management services
provider--An entity designated by a 9-1-1 administrative entity to provide
9-1-1 database management services that support the provision of 9-1-1
services.
(282) 9-1-1 database
services--Services purchased by a 9-1-1 administrative entity that accepts,
processes, and validates subscriber record information of telecommunications
providers for purposes of selective routing and automatic location
identification, and that may also provide statistical performance
measures.
(283) 9-1-1 network
services--Services purchased by a 9-1-1 administrative entity that routes 9-1-1
calls from an E9-1-1 selective router, 9-1-1 tandem, next generation 9-1-1
system, Internet Protocol-based 9-1-1 system or its equivalent to public safety
answering points or a public safety answering point network.
(284) 9-1-1 network services provider--A CTU
designated by the appropriate 9-1-1 administrative entity to provide 9-1-1
network services in a designated area.
(285) 911 system--A system of processing
emergency 911 calls, as defined in Texas Health and Safety Code §
772.001, as
may be subsequently amended.
(286)
9-1-1 selective routing tandem switch--A switch located in a telephone central
office that is equipped to accept, process, and route 9-1-1 calls to a
predetermined, specific location. Also known as E9-1-1 control office or E9-1-1
selective router.
(287) 9-1-1
service--As defined in Texas Health and Safety Code §
771.001(6)
and §
772.001(6).
(288) 9-1-1 service agreement--A contract
addressing the 9-1-1 service arrangements for a local area that the appropriate
9-1-1 administrative entity enters into.
(289) 9-1-1 service arrangement--Each
particular arrangement for 9-1-1 emergency service specified by the appropriate
9-1-1 administrative entity for the relevant rate centers within its
jurisdictional area and that is subject to a 9-1-1 service agreement.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.