Michigan Laws 460.1323 – Attaching entity; standards; compliance; rate; civil action
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Terms Used In Michigan Laws 460.1323
- Attaching entity: means a public or private party or entity, other than the municipally owned electric utility, that, pursuant to an agreement with the municipally owned electric utility, places a wire or cable attachment on a nonauthority pole or related infrastructure within the communication space. See Michigan Laws 460.1303
- Communication space: means that term as defined in the "National Electric Safety Code" published by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. See Michigan Laws 460.1305
- Law: means federal, state, or local law, including common law, a statute, a rule, a regulation, an order, or an ordinance. See Michigan Laws 460.1307
- Municipally owned electric utility: means a system owned by a municipality or combination of municipalities to furnish power or light and includes a cooperative electric utility that, on or after the effective date of this act, acquired all or substantially all of the assets of a municipal electric utility, when applying this act to the former territory of the municipal electric utility. See Michigan Laws 460.1307
- Nonauthority pole: means a utility pole used for electric delivery service and controlled by the governing body of a municipally owned electric utility. See Michigan Laws 460.1307
- Rate: means a recurring charge. See Michigan Laws 460.1307
- United States: shall be construed to include the district and territories. See Michigan Laws 8.3o
(1) An attaching entity, and all contractors or parties under its control, shall comply with reliability, safety, and engineering standards adopted by the governing body of a municipally owned electric utility, including, but not limited to, the following:
(a) Applicable engineering and safety standards governing installation, maintenance, and operation of facilities and the performance of work in or around the municipally owned electric utility nonauthority poles and facilities.
(b) The “National Electric Safety Code” published by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.
(c) Regulations of the United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
(d) Other reasonable safety and engineering requirements to which municipally owned electric utility facilities are subject by law.
(2) The governing body of a municipally owned electric utility may require an attaching entity to execute an agreement for wire or cable attachments to nonauthority poles or related infrastructure.
(3) The governing body of a municipally owned electric utility shall not charge an attaching entity a rate for wire or cable pole attachments within the communication space on a nonauthority pole greater than the maximum allowable rate pursuant to 47 USC 224(d) and (e) as established in Federal Communications Commission Order on Reconsideration 15-151.
(4) Subject to section 27, an attaching entity may commence a civil action for injunctive relief for a violation of this section. The attaching entity shall not file an action under this subsection unless the attaching entity has first provided the municipally owned electric utility with a written notice of the intent to sue. Within 30 days after the municipally owned electric utility receives written notice of intent to sue, the municipally owned electric utility and the attaching entity shall meet and make a good-faith attempt to determine if there is a credible basis for the action. If the parties agree that there is a credible basis for the action, the governing body of the municipally owned electric utility shall take all reasonable and prudent steps necessary to comply with the applicable requirements of this section within 90 days after the meeting.