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Full Text of HB4562
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HB4562 - 104th General Assembly
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104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
HB4562
Introduced 1/30/2026, by Rep. Maurice A. West, II
SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
220 ILCS 5/13-102
from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-102
220 ILCS 5/13-103
from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-103
220 ILCS 5/13-406.1
Amends the Public Utilities Act. In provisions concerning a Large
Electing Provider's transition to IP-based networks and service, provides
that a Large Electing Provider shall provide telecommunications service,
including telecommunications service over traditional circuit switched
networks, to existing business and residential end-use customers until at
least December 31, 2031. Provides that, beginning January 1, 2032, a Large
Electing Provider shall start the process of returning the salvage value
of traditional circuit switched networks to the people of the State.
Requires a Large Electing Provider to complete the salvage of the Large
Electing Provider's traditional circuit switched networks by January 1,
2038. Provides that the Large Electing Provider shall document and report
to the Department of Public Health and the Illinois Commerce Commission,
on a quarterly basis, all activities related to the salvage of the Large
Electing Provider's traditional circuit switch networks, including, but
not limited to, the total realized salvage value, a per-mile salvage
value, the geographic location of all salvages, and the value of such
salvages. Provides that, if a Large Electing Provider retires a
traditional circuit switch network, the Large Electing Provider shall,
beginning on December 1, 2032 and annually thereafter, transfer the
salvage value of the retired networks to the Lead Service Line Replacement
Fund for the sole purpose of providing grants to municipal and private
water utilities to replace lead service lines. Effective immediately.
LRB104 17663 AAS 31094 b
A BILL FOR
HB4562
LRB104 17663 AAS 31094 b
1
AN ACT concerning regulation.
2
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3
represented in the General Assembly:
4
Section 5.
The Public Utilities Act is amended by changing
5
Sections 13-102, 13-103, and 13-406.1 as follows:
6
(220 ILCS 5/13-102)
(from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-102)
7
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2030)
8
Sec. 13-102.
Findings.
With respect to telecommunications
9
services, as herein defined, the General Assembly finds that:
10
(a) universally available and widely affordable
11
telecommunications services are essential to the health,
12
welfare and prosperity of all Illinois citizens;
13
(b) federal regulatory and judicial rulings in the
14
1980s caused a restructuring of the telecommunications
15
industry and opened some aspects of the industry to
16
competitive entry, thereby necessitating revision of State
17
telecommunications regulatory policies and practices;
18
(c) revisions in telecommunications regulatory
19
policies and practices in Illinois beginning in the
20
mid-1980s brought the benefits of competition to consumers
21
in many telecommunications markets, but not in local
22
exchange telecommunications service markets;
23
(d) the federal Telecommunications Act of 1996
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1
established the goal of opening all telecommunications
2
service markets to competition and accords to the states
3
the responsibility to establish and enforce policies
4
necessary to attain that goal;
5
(e) it is in the immediate interest of the People of
6
the State of Illinois for the State to exercise its rights
7
within the new framework of federal telecommunications
8
policy to ensure that the economic benefits of competition
9
in all telecommunications service markets are realized as
10
effectively as possible;
11
(f) the competitive offering of all telecommunications
12
services will increase innovation and efficiency in the
13
provision of telecommunications services and may lead to
14
reduced prices for consumers, increased investment in
15
communications infrastructure, the creation of new jobs,
16
and the attraction of new businesses to Illinois;
17
(g) protection of the public interest requires changes
18
in the regulation of telecommunications carriers and
19
services to ensure, to the maximum feasible extent, the
20
reasonable and timely development of effective competition
21
in all telecommunications service markets;
22
(h) Illinois residents rely on today's modern wired
23
and wireless Internet Protocol (IP) networks and services
24
to improve their lives by connecting them to school and
25
college degrees, work and job opportunities, family and
26
friends, information, and entertainment, as well as
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1
emergency responders and public safety officials; Illinois
2
businesses rely on these modern IP networks and services
3
to compete in a global marketplace by expanding their
4
customer base, managing inventory and operations more
5
efficiently, and offering customers specialized and
6
personalized products and services; without question,
7
Illinois residents and our State's economy rely profoundly
8
on the modern wired and wireless IP networks and services
9
in our State;
10
(i) the transition from 20th century traditional
11
circuit switched and other legacy telephone services to
12
modern 21st century next generation Internet Protocol (IP)
13
services is taking place at an extraordinary pace as
14
Illinois consumers are upgrading to home communications
15
service using IP technology, including high speed
16
Internet, Voice over Internet Protocol, and wireless
17
service;
18
(j) this rapid transition to IP-based communications
19
has dramatically transformed the way people communicate
20
and has provided significant benefits to consumers in the
21
form of innovative functionalities resulting from the
22
seamless convergence of voice, video, and text, benefits
23
realized by the General Assembly when it chose to
24
transition its own telecommunications system to an all IP
25
communications network in 2016;
26
(k) the benefits of the transition to IP-based
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1
networks and services were also recognized by the General
2
Assembly in 2015 through the enactment of legislation
3
requiring that every 9-1-1 emergency system in Illinois
4
provide Next Generation 9-1-1 service by July 1, 2020, and
5
requiring that the Next Generation 9-1-1 network must be
6
an IP-based platform;
and
7
(l) completing the transition to all IP-based networks
8
and technologies is in the public interest because it will
9
promote continued innovation, consumer benefits, increased
10
efficiencies, and increased investment in IP-based
11
networks and services
;
.
12
(m) a consumer-led transition to IP-based networks is
13
the best way to transition to those networks;
14
(n) the health and safety of Illinois residents is of
15
the utmost importance and, until the health and safety of
16
Illinois residents can be assured, it is prudent to ensure
17
that traditional circuit switched networks are maintained
18
by telecommunications carriers until at least December 31,
19
2031; and
20
(o) traditional circuit switched networks were built
21
under rate-of-return regulations where telecommunications
22
carriers were reimbursed by their customers equal to the
23
telecommunications carriers' just and reasonable
24
investments in the traditional circuit switched networks
25
plus a profit; once the health and safety of Illinois
26
residents is assured and traditional circuit switched
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1
networks are retired, it is the policy of this State that
2
the salvage value of the traditional circuit switched
3
networks be returned to Illinois residents.
4
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17
.)
5
(220 ILCS 5/13-103)
(from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-103)
6
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2030)
7
Sec. 13-103.
Policy.
Consistent with its findings, the
8
General Assembly declares that it is the policy of the State of
9
Illinois that:
10
(a) telecommunications services should be available to
11
all Illinois citizens at just, reasonable, and affordable
12
rates and that such services should be provided as widely
13
and economically as possible in sufficient variety,
14
quality, quantity and reliability to satisfy the public
15
interest;
16
(b) consistent with the protection of consumers of
17
telecommunications services and the furtherance of other
18
public interest goals, competition in all
19
telecommunications service markets should be pursued as a
20
substitute for regulation in determining the variety,
21
quality and price of telecommunications services and that
22
the economic burdens of regulation should be reduced to
23
the extent possible consistent with the furtherance of
24
market competition and protection of the public interest;
25
(c) all necessary and appropriate modifications to
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LRB104 17663 AAS 31094 b
1
State regulation of telecommunications carriers and
2
services should be implemented without unnecessary
3
disruption to the telecommunications infrastructure system
4
or to consumers of telecommunications services and that it
5
is necessary and appropriate to establish rules to
6
encourage and ensure orderly transitions in the
7
development of markets for all telecommunications
8
services;
9
(d) the consumers of telecommunications services and
10
facilities provided by persons or companies subject to
11
regulation pursuant to this Act and Article should be
12
required to pay only reasonable and non-discriminatory
13
rates or charges and that in no case should rates or
14
charges for non-competitive telecommunications services
15
include any portion of the cost of providing competitive
16
telecommunications services, as defined in Section 13-209,
17
or the cost of any nonregulated activities;
18
(e) the regulatory policies and procedures provided in
19
this Article are established in recognition of the
20
changing nature of the telecommunications industry and
21
therefore should be subject to systematic legislative
22
review to ensure that the public benefits intended to
23
result from such policies and procedures are fully
24
realized;
25
(f) development of and prudent investment in advanced
26
telecommunications services and networks that foster
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1
economic development of the State should be encouraged
2
through the implementation and enforcement of policies
3
that promote effective and sustained competition in all
4
telecommunications service markets;
and
5
(g) completion of the transition to modern IP-based
6
networks should be encouraged through relief from the
7
outdated regulations that require continued investment in
8
legacy circuit switched networks from which Illinois
9
consumers have largely transitioned, while at the same
10
time ensuring that consumers have access to available
11
alternative services that provide quality voice service
12
and access to emergency communications
;
.
13
(h) a consumer-led transition to IP-based networks is
14
the best way to transition to those networks; and
15
(i) the health and safety of Illinois residents is of
16
the utmost importance and, until the health and safety of
17
Illinois residents can be assured, it is prudent to ensure
18
that traditional circuit switched networks are maintained
19
by telecommunications carriers until at least December 31,
20
2031.
21
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17
.)
22
(220 ILCS 5/13-406.1)
23
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2030)
24
Sec. 13-406.1.
Large Electing Provider transition to
25
IP-based networks and service.
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LRB104 17663 AAS 31094 b
1
(a) As used in this Section:
2
"Alternative voice service" means service that includes
3
all of the applicable functionalities for voice telephony
4
services described in 47 CFR 54.101(a).
5
"Existing customer" means a residential customer of the
6
Large Electing Provider who is subscribing to a
7
telecommunications service on the date the Large Electing
8
Provider sends its notice under paragraph (1) of subsection
9
(c) of this Section of its intent to cease offering and
10
providing service. For purposes of this Section, a residential
11
customer of the Large Electing Provider whose service has been
12
temporarily suspended, but not finally terminated as of the
13
date that the Large Electing Provider sends that notice, shall
14
be deemed to be an "existing customer".
15
"Large Electing Provider" means an Electing Provider, as
16
defined in Section 13-506.2 of this Act, that (i) reported in
17
its annual competition report for the year 2016 filed with the
18
Commission under Section 13-407 of this Act and 83 Ill. Adm.
19
Code 793 that it provided at least 700,000 access lines to end
20
users; and (ii) is affiliated with a provider of commercial
21
mobile radio service, as defined in 47 CFR 20.3, as of January
22
1, 2017.
23
"New customer" means a residential customer who is not
24
subscribing to a telecommunications service provided by the
25
Large Electing Provider on the date the Large Electing
26
Provider sends its notice under paragraph (1) of subsection
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(c) of this Section of its intent to cease offering and
2
providing that service.
3
"Provider" includes every corporation, company,
4
association, firm, partnership, and individual and their
5
lessees, trustees, or receivers appointed by a court that sell
6
or offer to sell an alternative voice service.
7
"Reliable access to 9-1-1" means access to 9-1-1 that
8
complies with the applicable rules, regulations, and
9
guidelines established by the Federal Communications
10
Commission and the applicable provisions of the Emergency
11
Telephone System Act and implementing rules.
12
"Willing provider" means a provider that voluntarily
13
participates in the request for service process.
14
(b) Beginning June 30, 2017, a Large Electing Provider
15
may, to the extent permitted by and consistent with federal
16
law, including, as applicable, approval by the Federal
17
Communications Commission of the discontinuance of the
18
interstate-access component of a telecommunications service,
19
cease to offer and provide a telecommunications service to an
20
identifiable class or group of customers, other than voice
21
telecommunications service to residential customers or a
22
telecommunications service to a class of customers under
23
subsection (b-5) of this Section, upon 60 days' notice to the
24
Commission and affected customers.
25
(b-5) Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary in
26
this Section 13-406.1, beginning December 31, 2021, a Large
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LRB104 17663 AAS 31094 b
1
Electing Provider may, to the extent permitted by and
2
consistent with federal law, including, if applicable,
3
approval by the Federal Communications Commission of the
4
discontinuance of the interstate-access component of a
5
telecommunication service, cease to offer and provide a
6
telecommunications service to one or more of the following
7
classes or groups of customers upon 60 days' notice to the
8
Commission and affected customers: (1) electric utilities, as
9
defined in Section 16-102 of this Act; (2) public utilities,
10
as defined in Section 3-105 of this Act, that offers natural
11
gas or water services; (3) electric, gas, and water utilities
12
that are excluded from the definition of public utility under
13
paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of Section 3-105 of this Act;
14
(4) water companies as described in paragraph (2) of
15
subsection (b) of Section 3-105 of this Act; (5) natural gas
16
cooperatives as described in paragraph (4) of subsection (b)
17
of Section 3-105 of this Act; (6) electric cooperatives as
18
defined in Section 3-119 of this Act; (7) entities engaged in
19
the commercial generation of electric power and energy; (8)
20
the functional divisions of public agencies, as defined in
21
Section 2 of the Emergency Telephone System Act, that provide
22
police or firefighting services; and (9) 9-1-1 Authorities, as
23
defined in Section 2 of the Emergency Telephone System Act;
24
provided that the date shall be extended to December 21, 2022,
25
for (i) an electric utility, as defined in Section 16-102 of
26
this Act, that serves more than 3 million customers in the
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LRB104 17663 AAS 31094 b
1
State; and (ii) an entity engaged in the commercial generation
2
of electric power and energy that operates one or more nuclear
3
power plants in the State.
4
(c) Beginning June 30, 2017, a Large Electing Provider
5
may, to the extent permitted by and consistent with federal
6
law, cease to offer and provide voice telecommunications
7
service to an identifiable class or group of residential
8
customers, which, for the purposes of this subsection (c),
9
shall be referred to as "requested service", subject to
10
compliance with the following requirements:
11
(1) No less than 255 days prior to providing notice to
12
the Federal Communications Commission of its intent to
13
discontinue the interstate-access component of the
14
requested service, the Large Electing Provider shall:
15
(A) file a notice of the proposed cessation of the
16
requested service with the Commission, which shall
17
include a statement that the Large Electing Provider
18
will comply with any service discontinuance rules and
19
regulations of the Federal Communications Commission
20
pertaining to compatibility of alternative voice
21
services with medical monitoring devices; and
22
(B) provide notice of the proposed cessation of
23
the requested service to each of the Large Electing
24
Provider's existing customers within the affected
25
geographic area by first-class mail separate from
26
customer bills. If the customer has elected to receive
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1
electronic billing, the notice shall be sent
2
electronically and by first-class mail separate from
3
customer bills. The notice provided under this
4
subparagraph (B) shall describe the requested service,
5
identify the earliest date on which the Large Electing
6
Provider intends to cease offering or providing the
7
telecommunications service, provide a telephone number
8
by which the existing customer may contact a service
9
representative of the Large Electing Provider, and
10
provide a telephone number by which the existing
11
customer may contact the Commission's Consumer
12
Services Division. The notice shall also include the
13
following statement in English and in Spanish:
14
"If you do not believe that an alternative
15
voice service including reliable access to 9-1-1
16
is available to you, from either [name of Large
17
Electing Provider] or another provider of wired or
18
wireless voice service where you live, you have
19
the right to request the Illinois Commerce
20
Commission to investigate the availability of
21
alternative voice service including reliable
22
access to 9-1-1. To do so, you must submit such a
23
request either in writing or by signing and
24
returning a copy of this notice, no later than
25
(insert date), 60 days after the date of the
26
notice to the following address:
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Chief Clerk of the Illinois Commerce Commission
2
527 East Capitol Avenue
3
Springfield, Illinois 62706
4
You must include in your request a reference
5
to the notice you received from [Large Electing
6
Provider's name] and the date of notice.".
7
Thirty days following the date of notice, the
8
Large Electing Provider shall provide each customer to
9
which the notice was sent a follow-up notice
10
containing the same information and reminding
11
customers of the deadline for requesting the
12
Commission to investigate alternative voice service
13
with access to 9-1-1.
14
(2) After June 30, 2017, and only in a geographic area
15
for which a Large Electing Provider has provided notice of
16
proposed cessation of the requested service to existing
17
customers under paragraph (1) of this subsection (c), an
18
existing customer of that provider may, within 60 days
19
after issuance of such notice, request the Commission to
20
investigate the availability of alternative voice service
21
including reliable access to 9-1-1 to that customer. For
22
the purposes of this paragraph (2), existing customers who
23
make such a request are referred to as "requesting
24
existing customers". The Large Electing Provider may cease
25
to offer or provide the requested service to existing
26
customers who do not make a request for investigation
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1
beginning 30 days after issuance of the notice required by
2
paragraph (5) of this subsection (c).
3
(A) In response to all requests and investigations
4
under this paragraph (2), the Commission shall conduct
5
a single investigation to be commenced 75 days after
6
the receipt of notice under paragraph (1) of this
7
subsection (c), and completed within 135 days after
8
commencement. The Commission shall, within 135 days
9
after commencement of the investigation, make one of
10
the findings described in subdivisions (i) and (ii) of
11
this subparagraph (A) for each requesting existing
12
customer.
13
(i) If, as a result of the investigation, the
14
Commission finds that service from at least one
15
provider offering alternative voice service
16
including reliable access to 9-1-1 through any
17
technology or medium is available to one or more
18
requesting existing customers, the Commission
19
shall declare by order that, with respect to each
20
requesting existing customer for which such a
21
finding is made, the Large Electing Provider may
22
cease to offer or provide the requested service
23
beginning 30 days after the issuance of the notice
24
required by paragraph (5) of this subsection (c).
25
(ii) If, as a result of the investigation, the
26
Commission finds that service from at least one
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1
provider offering alternative voice service,
2
including reliable access to 9-1-1, through any
3
technology or medium is not available to one or
4
more requesting existing customers, the Commission
5
shall declare by order that an emergency exists
6
with respect to each requesting existing customer
7
for which such a finding is made.
8
(B) If the Commission declares an emergency under
9
subdivision (ii) of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph
10
(2) with respect to one or more requesting existing
11
customers, the Commission shall conduct a request for
12
service process to identify a willing provider of
13
alternative voice service including reliable access to
14
9-1-1. A provider shall not be required to participate
15
in the request for service process. The willing
16
provider may utilize any form of technology that is
17
capable of providing alternative voice service
18
including reliable access to 9-1-1, including, without
19
limitation, Voice over Internet Protocol services and
20
wireless services. The Commission shall, within 45
21
days after the issuance of an order finding that an
22
emergency exists, make one of the determinations
23
described in subdivisions (i) and (ii) of this
24
subparagraph (B) for each requesting existing customer
25
for which an emergency has been declared.
26
(i) If the Commission determines that another
HB4562
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LRB104 17663 AAS 31094 b
1
provider is willing and capable of providing
2
alternative voice service including reliable
3
access to 9-1-1 to one or more requesting existing
4
customers for which an emergency has been
5
declared, the Commission shall declare by order
6
that, with respect to each requesting existing
7
customer for which such a determination is made,
8
the Large Electing Provider may cease to offer or
9
provide the requested service beginning 30 days
10
after the issuance of the notice required by
11
paragraph (5) of this Section.
12
(ii) If the Commission determines that for one
13
or more of the requesting existing customers for
14
which an emergency has been declared there is no
15
other provider willing and capable of providing
16
alternative voice service including reliable
17
access to 9-1-1, the Commission shall issue an
18
order requiring the Large Electing Provider to
19
provide alternative voice service including
20
reliable access to 9-1-1 to each requesting
21
existing customer utilizing any form of technology
22
capable of providing alternative voice service
23
including reliable access to 9-1-1, including,
24
without limitation, continuation of the requested
25
service, Voice over Internet Protocol services,
26
and wireless services, until another willing
HB4562
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LRB104 17663 AAS 31094 b
1
provider is available. A Large Electing Provider
2
may fulfill the requirement through an affiliate
3
or another provider. The Large Electing Provider
4
may request that such an order be rescinded upon a
5
showing that an alternative voice service
6
including reliable access to 9-1-1 has become
7
available to the requesting existing customer from
8
another provider.
9
(3) If the Commission receives no requests for
10
investigation from any existing customer under paragraph
11
(2) of this subsection (c) within 60 days after issuance
12
of the notice under paragraph (1) of this subsection (c),
13
the Commission shall provide written notice to the Large
14
Electing Provider of that fact no later than 75 days after
15
receipt of notice under paragraph (1) of this subsection
16
(c). Notwithstanding any provision of this subsection (c)
17
to the contrary, if no existing customer requests an
18
investigation under paragraph (2) of this subsection (c),
19
the Large Electing Provider may immediately provide the
20
notice to the Federal Communications Commission as
21
described in paragraph (4) of this subsection (c).
22
(4) At the same time that it provides notice to the
23
Federal Communications Commission of its intent to
24
discontinue the interstate-access component of the
25
requested service, the Large Electing Provider shall:
26
(A) file a notice of proposal to cease to offer and
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1
provide the requested service with the Commission; and
2
(B) provide a notice of proposal to cease to offer
3
and provide the requested service to existing
4
customers and new customers receiving the service at
5
the time of the notice within each affected geographic
6
area, with the notice made by first-class mail or
7
within customer bills delivered by mail or equivalent
8
means of notice, including electronic means if the
9
customer has elected to receive electronic billing.
10
The notice provided under this subparagraph (B) shall
11
include a brief description of the requested service,
12
the date on which the Large Electing Provider intends
13
to cease offering or providing the telecommunications
14
service, and a statement as required by 47 CFR 63.71
15
that describes the process by which the customer may
16
submit comments to the Federal Communications
17
Commission.
18
(5) Upon approval by the Federal Communications
19
Commission of its request to discontinue the
20
interstate-access component of the requested service and
21
subject to the requirements of any order issued by the
22
Commission under subdivision (ii) of subparagraph (B) of
23
paragraph (2) of this subsection (c), the Large Electing
24
Provider may immediately cease to offer the requested
25
service to all customers not receiving the service on the
26
date of the Federal Communications Commission's approval
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1
and may cease to offer and provide the requested service
2
to all customers receiving the service at the time of the
3
Federal Communications Commission's approval upon 30 days'
4
notice to the Commission and affected customers. Notice to
5
affected customers under this paragraph (5) shall be
6
provided by first-class mail separate from customer bills.
7
The notice provided under this paragraph (5) shall
8
describe the requested service, identify the date on which
9
the Large Electing Provider intends to cease offering or
10
providing the telecommunications service, and provide a
11
telephone number by which the existing customer may
12
contact a service representative of the Large Electing
13
Provider.
14
(6) The notices provided for in paragraph (1) of this
15
subsection (c) are not required as a prerequisite for the
16
Large Electing Provider to cease to offer or provide a
17
telecommunications service in a geographic area where
18
there are no residential customers taking service from the
19
Large Electing Provider on the date that the Large
20
Electing Provider files notice to the Federal
21
Communications Commission of its intent to discontinue the
22
interstate-access component of the requested service in
23
that geographic area.
24
(7) For a period of 45 days following the date of a
25
notice issued under paragraph (5) of this Section, an
26
existing customer (i) who is located in the affected
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1
geographic area subject to that notice; (ii) who was
2
receiving the requested service as of the date of the
3
Federal Communications Commission's approval of the Large
4
Electing Provider's request to discontinue the
5
interstate-access component of the requested service;
6
(iii) who did not make a timely request for investigation
7
under paragraph (2) of this subsection (c); and (iv) whose
8
service will be or has been discontinued under paragraph
9
(5), may request assistance from the Large Electing
10
Provider in identifying providers of alternative voice
11
service including reliable access to 9-1-1. Within 15 days
12
of the request, the Large Electing Provider shall provide
13
the customer with a list of alternative voice service
14
providers.
15
(8) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act,
16
except as expressly authorized by this subsection (c), the
17
Commission may not, upon its own motion or upon complaint,
18
investigate, suspend, disapprove, condition, or otherwise
19
regulate the cessation of a telecommunications service to
20
an identifiable class or group of customers once initiated
21
by a Large Electing Provider under subsection (b) or (b-5)
22
of this Section or this subsection (c).
23
(9) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
24
Section, a Large Electing Provider shall provide
25
telecommunications service, including telecommunications
26
service over traditional circuit switched networks, to
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1
existing business and residential end-use customers until
2
at least December 31, 2031.
3
(10) Beginning January 1, 2032, a Large Electing
4
Provider shall start the process of returning the salvage
5
value of traditional circuit switched networks to the
6
people of this State. The Large Electing Provider shall
7
complete the salvage of the Large Electing Provider's
8
traditional circuit switched networks by January 1, 2038.
9
The Large Electing Provider shall document and report to
10
the Department of Public Health and the Commission, on a
11
quarterly basis, activities related to the salvage of the
12
Large Electing Provider's traditional circuit switched
13
networks, including, but not limited to, the total
14
realized salvage value, a per-mile salvage value, the
15
geographic location of all salvages, and the value of such
16
salvages.
17
For the purposes of this Section, "salvage value"
18
means the monetary value received by a Large Electing
19
Provider for the components of a traditional circuit
20
switched network, including, but not limited to, the
21
copper wiring comprising the traditional circuit switched
22
network, once the traditional circuit switched network is
23
no longer in use.
24
(11) If a Large Electing Provider retires a
25
traditional circuit switched network, the Large Electing
26
Provider shall, beginning on January 1, 2032 and annually
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1
thereafter, transfer the salvage value of the retired
2
network to the Lead Service Line Replacement Fund for the
3
sole purpose of providing grants to municipal and private
4
water utilities to replace lead service lines.
5
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 100-719, eff. 8-3-18
.)
6
Section 99.
Effective date.
This Act takes effect upon
7
becoming law.
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