(a)

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Terms Used In Tennessee Code 65-25-134

  • Area coverage: means that a service will be available to patrons in accordance with a financially feasible plan without regard to how thickly or sparsely patrons' premises may be located in a cooperative's areas of service. See Tennessee Code 65-25-102
  • Attachment: A procedure by which a person's property is seized to pay judgments levied by the court.
  • Board: means a cooperative's board of directors or the necessary number thereof to take action. See Tennessee Code 65-25-102
  • Code: includes the Tennessee Code and all amendments and revisions to the code and all additions and supplements to the code. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
  • cooperatives: means one (1) or more nonprofit cooperative membership corporations heretofore or hereafter organized under or otherwise subject to this chapter, including corporations transacting business in this state pursuant to §. See Tennessee Code 65-25-102
  • Corporation: A legal entity owned by the holders of shares of stock that have been issued, and that can own, receive, and transfer property, and carry on business in its own name.
  • Lease: A contract transferring the use of property or occupancy of land, space, structures, or equipment in consideration of a payment (e.g., rent). Source: OCC
  • Mortgage: The written agreement pledging property to a creditor as collateral for a loan.
  • Person: includes any natural person, firm, association, corporation, cooperative, business trust, partnership and federal, state or local governments, or departments, agencies or any other political subdivision thereof. See Tennessee Code 65-25-102
  • services: includes sales, exchanges, rentals, repairs and maintenance of land, facilities, equipment, machinery, appliances, accessories and goods and the financing of their acquisition by patrons. See Tennessee Code 65-25-102
  • State: when applied to the different parts of the United States, includes the District of Columbia and the several territories of the United States. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
  • United States: includes the District of Columbia and the several territories of the United States. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
(1) Notwithstanding § 7-59-316, every cooperative has the power and is authorized, acting through its board of directors, to acquire, construct, own, improve, operate, lease, maintain, sell, mortgage, pledge, or otherwise dispose of any system, plant or equipment for the provision of telephone, telegraph, voice over internet protocol, telecommunications services, or any other like system, plant, or equipment within or without the service area of the cooperative in compliance with chapters 4 and 5 of this title and all other applicable state and federal laws, rules, and regulations. Notwithstanding § 65-4-101(6)(A)(vi) or any other provision of this code or of any private act to the contrary, to the extent that any cooperative provides any of the services authorized by this subdivision (a)(1), the cooperative shall be subject to regulation by the Tennessee public utility commission in the same manner and to the same extent as other certificated providers of the services authorized by this subsection (a), including, without limitation, rules or orders governing anti-competitive practices, and shall be considered as and have the duties of a public utility, as defined in § 65-4-101, but only to the extent necessary to effect such regulation and only with respect to the cooperative’s provision of the services authorized by this subdivision (a)(1).
(2) Every cooperative has the power and is authorized, acting through its board of directors, to acquire, construct, own, improve, operate, lease, maintain, sell, mortgage, pledge, or otherwise dispose of any system, plant or equipment for the provision of broadband internet access, internet protocol-based video, video programming, or related or similar services, or any other like system, plant, or equipment within the service area of the cooperative in compliance with chapters 4 and 5 of this title and all other applicable state and federal laws, rules, and regulations, including, but not limited to, the requirement to obtain a franchise as set forth in § 7-59-304. Notwithstanding § 65-4-101(6)(A)(vi) or any other provision of this code or of any private act to the contrary, to the extent that any cooperative provides any of the services authorized by this subdivision (a)(2), the cooperative shall furnish the services on an area coverage basis, as defined in § 65-25-102, and shall be subject to regulation by the Tennessee public utility commission in the same manner and to the same extent as other providers of broadband internet access, internet protocol-based video, video programming, or related or similar services, including, without limitation, rules or orders governing anti-competitive practices, and shall be considered as and have the duties of a public utility, as defined in § 65-4-101, but only to the extent necessary to effect such regulation and only with respect to the cooperative’s provision of the services authorized by this subdivision (a)(2). In the event that a cooperative acquires, merges with, or consolidates with another entity that provides any one (1) of the services authorized by this subdivision (a)(2) in a geographic location concurrent with or adjacent to the electric service area of the cooperative, then, subsequent to such transaction, nothing in this section prohibits the electric cooperative from providing the services authorized by this subdivision (a)(2) in the geographic service territory in which the acquired or merged entity was authorized to provide such services prior to the merger, acquisition, or consolidation.
(3) A cooperative that elects to provide services authorized by subdivision (a)(2) shall provide other providers of such services non-discriminatory access to locate their equipment for the provision of such services on infrastructure or poles owned or controlled by the cooperative, subject to the terms of any pole attachment agreements between the cooperative and the other provider, the American National Standard Electric Safety Code described in § 68-101-104, and the structural integrity of the infrastructure or pole.
(b)

(1) A cooperative providing any of the services authorized by subsection (a) shall not provide subsidies for such services and shall administer, operate, and maintain the electric system separately in all respects, including establishing and maintaining a separate fund for the revenues from electric operations, and shall not directly or indirectly mingle electric system funds or accounts, or otherwise consolidate or combine the financing of the electric system, with those of any other of its operations.
(2) A cooperative providing any of the services authorized by subdivision (a)(2) shall administer and operate such services as a separate subsidiary.
(3) Notwithstanding the limitations set out in this subsection (b), a cooperative providing the services authorized by subsection (a) is authorized to:

(A) Dedicate a reasonable portion of the electric plant to the provision of such services, the costs of which shall be allocated to such services in the separate accounting required under this subsection (b); and
(B) Lend funds, at a rate of interest not less than the highest rate then earned by the cooperative on invested electric plant funds, to acquire, construct, and provide working capital for the system, plant, and equipment necessary to provide any of the services authorized under subsection (a); provided, that such interest costs shall be allocated to the cost of such services in the separate accounting required under this subsection (b).
(c)

(1) To the extent that it provides any of the services authorized by subsection (a), a cooperative has all the powers, obligations and authority granted entities providing telecommunications services under applicable laws of the United States or this state. To the extent that such authority and powers do not conflict with title 65, chapter 4 or 5, and any rules, regulations, or orders issued thereunder, a cooperative providing any of the services authorized by subsection (a) has all the authority and powers with respect to such services as are enumerated in this chapter.
(2) Notwithstanding the authorization granted in subsection (a), a cooperative shall not provide any of the services authorized by subsection (a) unrelated to its electric services within the service area of an entity in existence and operating as a telephone cooperative on April 24, 2017, with fewer than one hundred thousand (100,000) total lines organized and operating under chapter 29 of this title, and therefore shall adhere to those regulations of the 1995 Tennessee Telecommunications Act and rules of the Tennessee public utility commission, which are applicable to the telephone cooperatives, and specifically §§ 65-4-101 and 65-29-130.
(d) For regulatory purposes, a cooperative shall allocate to the costs of providing any of the services authorized by subsection (a):

(1) An amount for attachments to poles owned by the cooperative equal to the highest rate charged by the cooperative to any other person or entity for comparable pole attachments; and
(2) Any applicable rights-of-way fees, rentals, charges, or payments required by state or local law of a non-governmental corporation that provides the identical services.
(e)

(1) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to allow a cooperative to provide any service for which a license, certification, or registration is required under title 62, chapter 32, part 3.
(2) Nothing in this chapter shall allow a cooperative to provide any service for which a license, certification, or registration is required under title 62, chapter 32, part 3, or to provide pager service.
(f) This chapter supersedes any conflicting law.
(g) It is unlawful for a cooperative to use unfair or anticompetitive practices prohibited by applicable state or federal law. Such practices shall include, but are not limited to, predatory pricing, collusion, and tying.
(h) Any person who has been damaged as a result of a violation of this section may bring a civil action in chancery court for injunctive or declaratory relief against the violation.