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HomeMy WebLinkAboutTime Warner Cable Information 35 CENTS Newsstand KiNAIL Ithaca, New York • 12G 9� • , !SS. " ntner, fessor ity Might not b Ck c d a-ble ea. .... Says Time Warner must fulfill 4. } obli ations in Ithaca contract By WENDY SKINNER sion says has been illegally charged; and SIMEON MOSS • Comply with contract agree- Journal Staff ments regarding the maintenance The Associated Press The City of Ithaca has some of public access equipment;and, beefs with Time Warner Cable,and • Allow the city to see parts of video shows a Cornell research it hopes to resolve them by holding the merger contract that guarantee Wednesday on a mission to out on its consent to a merger there wil be no adverse changes in weous report that Russian forces involving the company's parent, local service. Whether the city's horn Northern Euro e ut ov Time Warner Entertainment Com- protest will slow approval of the p p g pany, and Newhouse Broadcasting Time Warner merger or prompt alert around the world. refunds is uncertain. and Advance Publications Inc. "In my opinion, Time Warner "We feel that Time Warner is needs our consent," said City not taking care of its contract obli- ' i gations and until they do, we will Attorney Charles Guttman, notingthat similarast standoffs between Russia withhold approval of a transfer of p e the cable company and the city e the franchise," Alderman John have ended in negotiations. - Efrvomson (D-2nd Ward) Ray McCabe, general manager announced at a non-voting Com- � of Time Warner, was out of town mon Council meeting Wednesday. Wednesday on business. A request to transfer the city's Tom Doheny, marketing manag- cable franchise with Time Warner er, said he wasn't aware of the res- n a* -to'the-new company; which will be' olution and added that'Time Warn known as Time Warner Entertain- er hadn't received documentation M ment-Advanced/ Newhouse, is cur- from the cable commission on cus- rently under consideration by the tomer complaints.Dohenv said. Rocket: Black Brent XXII New YorkCable Commission. Dohenv also said he knew of no Payload: scientific instruments Based on reports from the Ithaca problems Time Warner has had liv- Length:70 feet City Cable Commission, Common ing up to the franchise agreement Weight: 6 tons Council will be asked next Wednes- with the city and that FCC regula- Diameter: 30 inch diameter at base; day to vote on a resolution that tions were followed when Cable to 16 inches at top calls for Time Warner to: Plus service was initiated. Launched: Wednesday, 7:20 a.m. ! . Refund money to customers "Our company is just asking to Norway tima who were unfairly charged $1.74 change its name on the franchise Duration:23 minutes per month for "Cable Plus" service agreement," said Doheny, asserting Traveled: 1,000 miles, stopped 100 miles short of the North Pole I others received free until the signal that the city's actions would have Highest point: e N miles was scrambled; no bearing on Time Warner's cor- •Refund a$1.26 monthly"access porate agreement with Newhouse Journal Staff franchise fee" the cable commis- and Advance Publications. 44- 11 TTS Inside The Journal 3199 o CITY OF ITHACA 108 EAST GREEN STREET ITHACA, NEW YORK 14850 OFFICE OF TELEPHONE CITY CLERK (607)274-6570 February 3, 1995 Raymond H. McCabe Area Manager Time Warner Cable 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 Dear Mr. McCabe: Enclosed please find a certified copy of a resolution which was passed by Common Council of the City of Ithaca on February 1, 1995 . Please note that the City of Ithaca has determined to withhold its authorization and consent to the transfer of the franchise from the Cable Television System operating pursuant to the franchise with the City of Ithaca from Time Warner Entertainment-Advance/New House Partnership unless and until issues described in the resolution have been satisfactorily responded to by Time Warner Cable. If you have further questions regarding this matter, you should contact City Attorney Charles Guttman, 108 East Green Street, Ithaca, New York 14850, Telephone ( 607 )274-6504 . Very truly yours, � � 4( Julie Conley Holcomb Deputy City Clerk Enclosure cc : Steven Shaye, NYS Commission on Cable Television Ithaca City Cable Commission Charles Guttman, City Attorney JCH/cjh "An Equal Opportunity Employer with an Affirmative Action Program" tJ Recycled Paper RESOLUTION: TIME WARNER REQUEST FOR TRANSFER OF FRANCHISE AGREEMENT By Alderperson Efroymson: Seconded by Alderperson Gray WHEREAS, on or about November 1 , 1994, Time Warner Entertainment Company, L.P. which is the parent of Time Warner Cable, the franchisee under our Cable Franchise, advised the City of Ithaca that it intended to enter into an agreement with Advance Publications and Newhouse Broadcasting Corporation to create a new joint venture cable operation to be known as Time Warner Entertainment-Advance/Newhouse. Advance/Newhouse would contribute all of their cable television systems, serving 1 . 4 million customers, and Time Warner Cable would contribute cable systems with 2 . 8 million customers for a total of 4 .2 million customers which would be served by the new adventure, and WHEREAS, the joint venture would be managed by Time Warner Cable and be two-thirds owned by Time Warner and one-third owned by Advance/Newhouse, a partnership of Newhouse Broadcasting and Advance Publications, Inc. An executive committee with proportional representation from Time Warner and Advance/Newhouse will oversee the joint venture. Time Warner Cable further advised the City that the transfer of the Franchise to the Time Warner Entertainment-Advance/Newhouse partnership would have no affect on the ongoing local management of the cable system, that there- would be no adverse affects on the cable system or its customers, services, business practices or personnel, and WHEREAS, Time Warner Cable then forwarded to the City of Ithaca a detailed summary of the proposed franchise and requested that the City of Ithaca adopt a resolution authorizing and consenting to the transfer of the franchise and the cable television system operation pursuant to the franchise, and WHEREAS, this issue was referred to the Ithaca City Cable Commission for its advice and recommendations, and WHEREAS, the Ithaca City Cable Commission submitted a report to the Inter-Institutional Committee of Common Council on January 14, 1995, and WHEREAS, the report of the Ithaca City Cable Commission specifically stated that on September 12 , 1994, it had unanimously passed a resolution, a copy of which is attached to the report alleging that certain subscribers were improperly charged for Cable Plus at a $1 . 74 per month from the date in which they ordered the service until the date the service was actually scrambled on September 12 , 1994 and calling on Time Warner Cable to immediately refund this $1 . 74 month, pro rated for partial months, to all customers who were charged for this service prior to September 12, 1994, and WHEREAS, the report from the Ithaca City Cable Commission further states that on October 25, 1994, the Ithaca City Cable Commission unanimously passed a resolution objecting to Time Warner charging and itemizing as a separate franchise fee the $1 . 26 per month charge for access television and calling on Time Warner Cable to refund this so-called "franchise fee" as being an excess of the amount of franchise fee allowed by federal law, and WHEREAS, the report from the Ithaca City Cable Commission further states that on October 25, 1994, the Ithaca City Cable Commission passed unanimously another resolution alleging that Time Warner Cable has charged the 1994 access capital equipment budget (the 2% funds) for certain items marked "refurbishment" which in actuality represent equipment maintenance procedures; that this procedure is not in compliance with the requirement of good operating practice and calling on Time Warner Cable to abide by its repair responsibilities under the franchise agreement and refund the amounts charged for the two items of refurbishment to the 2% capital equipment fund, and WHEREAS, all of the above three resolutions were forwarded to Time Warner Cable, and WHEREAS, the report to the Inter-Institutional Committee further alleges that the Ithaca City Cable Commission has asked Time Warner Cable to clarify the date of inception of the current franchise and to allow a representative of the City to inspect the undisclosed portions of Time Warner Cable ' s agreement with Advance/Newhouse to ascertain in private and in confidence whether those provisions do not relate to the franchise as alleged by Time Warner Cable, and WHEREAS, according to the Ithaca City Cable Commission, Time Warner manager, Raymond McCabe, has orally replied that he does not agree with the resolutions, but that he has passed them on to Time Warner Cable' s corporate legal department for reply, and WHEREAS, to date, neither the City of Ithaca nor the Ithaca City Cable Commission has received any further response from Time Warner Cable; now, therefore, be it RESOLVED, That this Council hereby determines to withhold its authorization and consent to the transfer of the franchise and the Cable Television System operating pursuant to the franchise from Time Warner Entertainment Company/Time Warner Cable to Time Warner Entertainment-Advance/Newhouse partnership, unless and until the above issues have been satisfactorily responded to by Time Warner Cable, and be it further RESOLVED, That the City Clerk is hereby directed to forward a copy of this resolution to Time Warner Cable, the Ithaca City Cable Commission and the New York State Commission on Cable , Television. STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF TOMPKINS SS: CITY OF ITHACA I, Julie Conley Holcomb, Deputy City Clerk of the City of Ithaca, do hereby certify that the foregoing resolution is a true and exact copy of a resolution duly adopted by the Common Council of said City of Ithaca at a regular meeting held on the 1st day of February, 1995, and that the same is a complete copy of the whole of such resolution. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and the Corporate Seal of the City of Ithaca, this 3rd day of February, 1995 . . . c . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Deputy City Clerk of the City of Ithaca, New York T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E n February 6, 1995 Ms. Jean Finley Ithaca City Cable Commission 108 East Green Street Ithaca, NY 14850 Re: Pending resolutions Dear Ms. Finley: I would like to respond to a number of issues communicated at various times over the past 2 months. 1) Resolutions passed at October 25 Ithaca Cable Commission meeting: I have attached our response to individual resolutions. 2) Request for clarification of Franchise start date as identified on the FCC Form 394: iThe date listed, 6/29/92, is the date that the agreement between Time Warner Inc. and Tune Warner Entertainment closed. I understand that this is not the date that the City of Ithaca approved the Franchise transfer. If the actual date of the transfer is the preferred date please feel free to make that change to the document. 3) Your request for further review of the undisclosed portions of the agreement between TWE and Advance/Newhouse: A letter from our Counsel is attached. I trust that your concerns have been addressed and you will agree that Time Warner Cable is in compliance with the Franchise. I, therefore, respectfully request the City meet it's Franchise requirement and not unreasonably withhold consent to the transfer of ownership. I also request all future concerns dealing with Time Warner Cable compliance with the franchise be communicated in writing and the franchise provision in question be clearly identified. Sincerely yours, Raymohd H. McCabe Area Manager cc: Ms. Julie Holcomb, City Clerk The Honorable Benjamin Nichols Common Council Ithaca City Cable Commission 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 l% r ZZ�5 t ' CITY OF ITHACA 108 East Green Street Ithaca,New York 14850 The Cabe Telephone: 607,272.9081 Commission Fax: 607-272-7348 Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994 Whereas many City of Ithaca subscribers of the Time Warner Cable System elected before Sept. 12, 1994,to subscribe to the new Cable Plus Service(including CNN,the Learning Channel,ESPN, and Comedy Central), and ` Whereas, these subscribers were changed for Cable Plus at$1.74 per month from the date on which they ordered the service; and Whereas all other Time Warner customers received this same Cable Plus Service (including CNN, the Learning Channel, ESPN, and Comedy Central) free until the date of scrambling on Sept. 12, 1994; and Whereas legal proceedings in the State of New York have found unacceptable the practice of a cable operator's charging subscribers who ordered a similar service (events from Madison Square Garden) for that service while that service remained unscrambled so that other subscribers of the same system continued to receive the service without charge; and Whereas legal proceedings in the State of New York required the cable operator to refund to all customers who had paid for the abovementioned programming from Madison Square Garden all monies collected for the service during the entire period before the date when the channel was finally scrambled; Now therefore, the Ithaca City Cable Commission calls on Time Warner Cable immediately to refund $1.74 per month, prorated for partial months, to all customers who were charged for this service prior to Sept. 12, 1994, the date of scrambling. T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E Response to Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 5, 1994: CABLE PLUS Cable Plus is by FCC definition a cable programming service tier subject to FCC regulation and not subject to local regulation. No portion of the franchise was violated in its introduction. We believe that the Commission is clearly exceeding it's authority in calling for a refund on this level of service. As a courtesy I am offering the following: Time Warner introduced a new tier of service called Cable Plus on July 20,1994. The tier is made up of four programming services removed from our basic line up. As compensation for the loss of the services from the Basic lineup, we decreased the price of Basic service $1.06 in addition to the FCC required rollback. The decrease took effect with the customer's first bill after July 14, 1994. We introduced Cable Plus at $1.74 per month. The difference between the reduction in basic service price and the cost of the new service is due to the increase in fees payable to program providers as a result of the expected, and realized decrease in market penetration of the services moving to Cable Plus. We calculated the price for Cable Plus and the associated Basic rate reduction according to our understanding of FCC regulations, and filed all required documentation with the FCC. As a result of delays in equipment delivery and in an effort to not further inconvenience our customers, we delayed the signal scrambling date. This allowed customers wishing to subscribe additional time to do so without disruption. The delay in securing our signal is not unlike the offering of "Free Previews", a common practice in our industry to attract new viewers. It is important to reheat that all customers benefited from a S1.06 decrease in their monthly rate, resulting from the introduction of Cable Plus,_ re befothe first customer was charged for Cable Plus. Many customers, who are not fans of the programming offered on Cable Plus continue to benefit from a lower monthly Cable Bill as a result of the introduction of Cable Plus. 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 f 1 , IZL/gY 1�! CITY OF ITHACA 108 East Green Street Ithaca,New York 14850 The Cable Telephone: 607-272081 Commission Far 607-272-7348 Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25,, IM Whereas the Ithaca City Franchise calls for Time Warner Cable to maintain or replace Access and local origination equipment in a manner consistent with Good Operating Practice; and Whereas Good Operating Practice has a specific definition in the context of governmental and non- governmental contracts and is an accepted trade phrase, and Whereas Good Operating Practice for all equipment includes, at minimum: 1)For each piece of equipment, in accordance with the recommendations of the manufacturer if available, determining acceptable tolerances for replaceable parts and setting up a regular maintenance and inspection schedule; 2)Adhering to the regular maintenance and inspection schedule,including preventative maintenance procedures and regular replacement of replaceable parts that fall outside acceptable tolerances; 3)Setting up a system to check adherence to the regular maintenance schedule, such as posting this schedule and requiring the inspector or maintenance worker to initial and date it on completion of each scheduled maintenance procedure or inspection; and 4)Review of the initialed maintenance/inspection schedule or equivalent procedure by management on a regular basis to assure adherence to the schedule. 5)Replacing equipment that can no longer be brought into acceptable tolerances because of the unavailibility of standard replacement parts or because advances in equipment design dictate replacement. Whereas the two items marked "refurbishment" that TWC has charged to the 1994 access capital equipment budget (2% funds) represent equipment maintenance procedures involving the replacement of replaceable parts that have been analyzed and found to be beyond acceptable tolerances, and Whereas standard replacement parts were available and used for these replacements; and Whereas the replacement of worn parts with standard replacement parts on a predetermined schedule or when they are analyzed and found to deviate from original manufacturer's specifications beyond acceptable tolerances falls within the normal definition of Good Operating Practice; Therefore the Ithaca City Cable Commission calls on Time Warner Cable to abide by its repair responsibilities under the Franchise agreement and to refund the amounts charged for the two items of "refurbishment" to the 2% capital equipment fund; and Furthermore, the Ithaca City Cable Commission calls on Time Warner Cable to refrain from charging equipment "refurbishments" or this sort to the 2% funds in the future. 'Ile T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E Response to Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994: Access Capital Time Warner Cable did "refurbish" equipment in 1994 and charged the cost of the refurbishment to the 2% Access Capital Fund. It is an option for us to cover the cost of refurbishment from operating expenses instead of funds from the 2% Capital Fund. If we were to recover this cost from operating expenses, the result would be an increase in the monthly fee charged Ithaca subscribers in support of Public, Educational and Governmental Access. I have recently shared with the Cable Commission that the $1.26 currently charged covers less than 80% of the actual operating costs. Refurbishing an asset extends the life of the asset and is often a better alternative to replacing the asset at full cost. The result is increased purchasing power without the risk of a rate increase. We will proceed with the City's request to credit the cost of the refurbishment to 1995 Access Capital Funds adding the amount to the 2% due from 1995 Gross Receipts. Future refurbishments will also be charged to Operating Expenses with a possible result of an increase to the $1.26 P.E.G. Access Fee. 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 CITY OF ITHACA 108 East Green Street Ithaca,New York 14850 The Cade Telephone:807-2T -M Commission Fax. 607-272-7348 Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994 Whereas Franchise Fees in excess of 5% are in violation of the federal Cable Act of 1984 (622 (b)--unrevised in 1992); and Whereas, the City of Ithaca charges Time Warner Cable a 5 percent franchise fee on gross city revenues as allowed under the law, and Whereas the term'franchise fee' in the case of any franchise in effect on the date of the enactment of this title [Cable Act of 1992], does not include payments which are required by the franchise to be incurred by the cable operator for public, educational, or governmental access facilities"' Whereas Time Warner Cable has been charging City of Ithaca customers $1.26 per month for a "P.E.G. Access Franchise Fee" since the week of July 11, 1994, and Whereas the so-called "P.E.G. Access Franchise Fee" is cannot legally be charged as a franchise fee; and Whereas Time Warner Cable's General Manager Raymond McCabe was publicly informed that this charge is not a "Franchise Fee" by Assistant Deputy Director of the New York State Commission of Cable Television Steven Shaye at the Ithaca public hearing on cable television held in Common Council Chambers on July 13, 1994, and televised on Channel 53; and Whereas Time Warner Cable has taken no voluntary action to correct this situation; Therefore the Ithaca City Cable Commission calls on Time Warner Cable to refund this so-called "franchise fee" in full to each City of Ithaca subscriber that has been charged this "franchise fee" in excess of the amount of franchise fee allowed by federal law; and Be it further resolved that Time Warner Cable will desist from listing P.E.G.Access Franchise Fee on its bills to city subscribers. 1Pike & Fisher's Cable Act: Law and Legislative History, p484 T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E Response to Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994: P.E.G. ACCESS FRANCHISE FEE We believe our practice of itemizing the operating costs of P.E.G. Access on subscribers' bills and identifying as a franchise fee is in compliance with applicable Federal law. We will, however, act on the Commission's suggestion and change the name to P.E.G. Access Fee. The call for a refund is unwarranted and not supported by the franchise or applciable Federal law. The price for Basic service is below the $15.37 per month ceiling identified in the Franchise even when The PEG Access franchise fee and the 5% Franchise Fee is added. 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 Gary R.Mata Assistant General Counsel 1> T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E January 24, 1995 Ms. Jean Finley Chairperson Ithaca Cable Commission City of Ithaca Ithaca,NY 14850 Dear Ms. Finley: I am writing at the request of Mr. Ray McCabe the General Manager of our cable television system serving the Ithaca,New York area. It is my understanding that representatives of the City have inquired about certain documents related to the Time Warner Entertainment-Advance,/Newhouse Partnership which were referenced or identified in our FCC Form 394 filing as being confidential and proprietary. I would like to assure you and the City of Ithaca that those various documents do not, in any way, affect the System or the operation of the System serving Ithaca. Those documents address certain topics such as tax and accounting policies, Advance/Newhouse cable systems located in the US West service area(i.e. the states of Nebraska and Wyoming), employee benefits and the accounting treatment to be afforded certain Systems partially owned by Time Warner. I appreciate the City's interest in this transaction. I trust that we have answered other questions that you may have and that this letter will satisfactorily address those questions you had regarding these confidential documents. Thank you for your continuing cooperation and assistance. Verm truil o r , IMatz cc: Ray McC c.,w�vn�6mwrnocsys►,z�rt,.rtaw.vixwc�.noc Time Warner Cable 300 First Stamford Place Stamford CT 06902-6732 Tel 203.328.4865 Fax 203.328.4840 A IW,44.n nFr—W.—Fnrnrtnimm~rnm— / P T I M E W A R N E R OCT C A B L E L� October 24, 1994 OCT 2 j1994 Ms. Callista Paolangeli, Clerk CITY CLE 'S OFFICE City of Ithaca RK City Hall 108 E. Green Street Ithaca, NY 14850 Dear Ms. Paolangeli: With this letter, I want to inform you that federal regulators released additional rules October 5th related to the pass-through of franchise fees as well as the itemization of federal regulatory fees. The three cent fee is a pass through of the 37 cents per customer annual fee that is charged for the regulation of cable at the federal level. In its ruling, the FCC outlined that cable companies specifically should implement a three cents per month fee beginning in December, with an additional one cent (total of four cents) charged, beginning in March of 1995. Our customers will be provided 30 days' notice of this change in their next cable bill, and the monthly three cent increase will be implemented in the following billing statement. In accordance with FCC guidelines, both the three cent and additional one cent increase will be provided in a single notice to customers. The three cent fee will be itemized as a "Federal Government Regulatory Fee" on customer bills. If you have any questions about this federal regulatory fee, please do not hesitate to contact me at 272-7875, extension 3329. Sincerely, `� 1 RaymtSnd H. McCabe (m to Area Manager cc: The Honorable Ben Nichols Ms. Jean Finley, Chair of the Cable Commission 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 I c T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E r` February 6, 1995 �tl ( FtB 1 �It ii Ms. Jean Finley Ithaca City Cable Commission ' 108 East Green Street Ithaca, NY 14850 Re: Pending resolutions Dear Ms. Finley: I would like to respond to a number of issues communicated at various times over the past 2 months. 1) Resolutions passed at October 25 Ithaca Cable Commission meeting: I have attached our response to individual resolutions. 2) Request for clarification of Franchise start date as identified on the FCC Form 394: The date listed, 6/29/92, is the date that the agreement between Tune Warner Inc. and Tune Warner Entertainment closed. I understand that this is not the date that the City of Ithaca approved the Franchise transfer. If the actual date of the transfer is the preferred date please - feel free to make that change to the document. 3) Your request for fiuther review of the undisclosed portions of the agreement between TWE and Advance/Newhouse: A letter from our Counsel is attached. I trust that your concerns have been addressed and you will agree that Time Warner Cable is in compliance with the Franchise. I, therefore, respectfully request the City meet it's Franchise requirement and not unreasonably withhold consent to the transfer of ownership. I also request all future concerns dealing with Time Warner Cable compliance with the franchise be communicated in writing and the franchise provision in question be clearly identified. Sincerely yours, Raymo d H. McCabe Area Manager cc: Ms. Julie Holcomb, City Clerk The Honorable Benjamin Nichols Common Council Ithaca City Cable Commission 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 r a M+ "' ""! s F CID CITY OF(THACA 108 East Green Street Ithaca,New York 14850 The Cable __ Commission IF= 607-M-7348 Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994 Be it resolved that: 1) Under no circumstance shall the pool of capital funds for P.E.G. access equipment be less than 2% of gross city revenues; and " 2) All equipment shall be available equitably to all residents of the City of Ithaca. 3) In general no equipment is to be installed in any location where the de facto effect is to exclude equitable access to all residents of the City of Ithaca. 4) Any exceptions to this policy must be specifically authorized by ICCC. T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E Response to Resolution Passed Unanimously By the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994: P.E.G. Access Equipment 1) This is as stated in Section 14.1 C3 of the Franchise Agreement between Time Warner and the City of Ithaca. We believe ourselves to be in compliance with this requirement and plan to continue our compliance with this section. 2) This issue is also addressed in the Franchise in section 14.1 C3, "All access equipment shall be made available for access se by the City of Ithaca, local institutions and residents and surrounding ACC system residents" and in section 14.2 "ACC shall establish rules to insure that the studio(s) and portable equipment are available equitably. to the governmental, educational and public sectors. " We do not agree with this portion of the ICCC Resolution for the following reasons: The . governmental and educational sectors would be denied availability on an equitable basis. Time Warners efforts to increase utilization of access equipment are in compliance with the agreement. 3) We do not agree with this section for the following reasons: Again, it limits equitable access to equipment to residents of the City of Ithaca only, ignoring Educational and Governmental users, as well as residents of surrounding communities served by the same headend. Allowing for equitable use by the Educational and Governmental users requires more flexibility than suggested in the resolution. Time Warner has made efforts to make access equipment more available to the Educational and governmental sectors, specifically the Ithaca School District. At times this may require commitment of equipment over a long term at their location and may at times require equipment donation. 4) Whereas we agree that the franchise has requirements as to the utilization of Access equipment, we do not agree to the additional limitations placed upon us by this section. The "policy" is in violation of the agreement and ignores Time Warners ownership of the equipment as acknowledged in the Agreement. 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272.7875 t� o` CITY OF ITHACA 108 East Green Street Ithaca,New York 14850 The Cable Telephone: 607-2723081 Commission Fax: 607-M-7348 Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994 Whereas many City of Ithaca subscribers of the Time Warner Cable System elected before Sept. 12, 1994,to subscribe to the new Cable Plus Service(including CNN,the Learning Channel,ESPN, and Comedy Central), and ` Whereas, these subscribers were changed for Cable Plus at$1.74 per month from the date on which they ordered the service; and Whereas all other Time Warner customers received this same Cable Plus Service (including CNN, the Learning Channel, ESPN, and Comedy Central) free until the date of scrambling on Sept. 12, 1994; and Whereas legal proceedings in the State of New York have found unacceptable the practice of a cable operator's charging subscribers who ordered a similar service (events from Madison Square Garden) for that service while that service remained unscrambled so that other subscribers of the same system continued to receive the service without charge; and Whereas legal proceedings in the State of New York required the cable operator to refund to all customers who had paid for the abovementioned programming from Madison Square Garden all monies collected for the service during the entire period before the date when the channel was finally scrambled; Now therefore, the Ithaca City Cable Commission calls on Time Warner Cable immediately to refund $1.74 per month, prorated for partial months, to all customers who were charged for this service prior to Sept. 12, 1994, the date of scrambling. T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E Response to Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 5, 1994: CABLE PLUS Cable Plus is by FCC definition a cable programming service tier subject to FCC regulation and not subject to local regulation. No portion of the franchise was violated in its introduction. We believe that the Commission is clearly exceeding it's authority in calling for a refund on this level of service. As a courtesy I am offering the following: Time Warner introduced a new tier of service called Cable Plus on July 20,1994. The tier is made up of four programming services removed from our basic line up. As compensation fur the loss of the services from the Basic lineup, we decreased the price of Basic service $1.06 in addition to the FCC required rollback. The decrease took effect with the customer's first bill after July 14, 1994. We introduced Cable Plus at $1.74 per month. The difference between the reduction in basic service price and the cost of the new service is due to the increase in fees payable to program providers as a result of the expected, and realized decrease in market penetration of the services moving to Cable Plus. We calculated the price for Cable Plus and the associated Basic rate reduction according to our understanding of FCC regulations, and filed all required documentation with the FCC. As a result of delays in equipment delivery and in an effort to not further inconvenience our customers, we delayed the signal scrambling date,- This allowed customers wishing to subscribe additional time to do so without disruption. The delay in securing our signal is not unlike the offering of "Free Previews", a common practice in our industry to attract new viewers. It is important to repeat that all customers benefited from a 51.06 decrease in their monthly rate, resulting from the introduction of Cable Plus, before the first customer was charged for Cable Plus. Many customers, who are not fans of the programming offered on Cable Plus continue to benefit from a lower monthly Cable Bill as a result of the introduction of Cable Plus. 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 O� CITY OF ITHACA 108 East Green Street Ithaca,New York 14850 The Cable Telephone: 607-272-3081 Commission Fac 607-272-7348 Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994 Whereas the Ithaca City Franchise calls for Time Warner Cable to maintain or replace Access and local origination equipment in a manner consistent with Good Operating Practice; and Whereas Good Operating Practice has a specific definition in the context of governmental and non'- governmental ongovernmental contracts and is an accepted trade phrase, and Whereas Good Operating Practice for all equipment includes, at minimum: 1)For each piece of equipment, in accordance with the recommendations of the manufacturer if available, determining acceptable tolerances for replaceable parts and setting up a regular maintenance and inspection schedule; 2)Adhering to the regular maintenance and inspection schedule,including preventative maintenance procedures and regular replacement of replaceable parts that fall outside acceptable tolerances; 3)Setting up a system to check adherence to the regular maintenance schedule, such as posting this schedule and requiring the inspector or maintenance worker to initial and date it on completion of each scheduled maintenance procedure or inspection; and 4)Review of the initialed maintenance/inspection schedule or equivalent procedure by management on a regular basis to assure adherence to the schedule. 5)Replacing equipment that can no longer be brought into acceptable tolerances because of the unavailibility of standard replacement parts or because advances in equipment design dictate replacement. Whereas the two items marked "refurbishment" that TWC has charged to the 1994 access capital equipment budget (2% funds) represent equipment maintenance procedures involving the replacement of replaceable parts that have been analyzed and found to be beyond acceptable tolerances, and Whereas standard replacement parts were available and used for these replacements; and Whereas the replacement of worn parts with standard replacement parts on a predetermined schedule or when they are analyzed and found to deviate from original manufacturer's specifications beyond acceptable tolerances falls within the normal definition of Good Operating Practice; Therefore the Ithaca City Cable Commission calls on Time Warner Cable to abide by its repair responsibilities under the Franchise agreement and to refund the amounts charged for the two items of "refurbishment" to the 2% capital equipment fund; and Furthermore, the Ithaca City Cable Commission calls on Time Warner Cable to refrain from charging equipment "refurbishments" or this sort to the 2% funds in the future. T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E Response to Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994: Access Capital Time Warner Cable did "refurbish" equipment in 1994 and charged the cost of the refurbishment to the 2% Access Capital Fund. It is an option for us to cover the cost of refurbishment from operating expenses instead of funds from the 2% Capital F Fund. If we were to recover this cost from operating expenses, the result would be an increase in the monthly fee charged Ithaca subscribers in support of Public, Educational and Governmental Access. I have recently shared with the Cable Commission that the $1.26 currently charged covers less than 80% of the actual operating costs. Refurbishing an asset extends the life of the asset and is often a better alternative to replacing the asset at full cost. The result is increased purchasing power without the risk of a rate increase. We will proceed with the City's request to credit the cost of the refurbishment to 1995 Access Capital Funds adding the amount to the 2% due from 1995 Gross Receipts. Future refurbishments will also be charged to Operating Expenses with a possible result of an increase to the $1.26 P.E.G. Access Fee. 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272.7875 0 CITY OF ITHACA 108 East Green Street Ithaca,New York 14850 The Cable Telephone:6D7-M-3= Commission Fax: 607-272-734$ Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994 Whereas Franchise Fees in excess of 5% are in violation of the federal Cable Act of 1984 (622 (b)--unrevised in 1992); and Whereas, the City of Ithaca. charges Time Warner Cable a 5 percent franchise fee on gross city revenues as allowed under the law; and Whereas the term'franchise fee' in the case of any franchise in effect on the date of the enactment of this title [Cable Act of 1992], does not include payments which are required by the franchise to be incurred by the cable operator for public, educational, or governmental access facilitiesn' Whereas Time Warner Cable has been charging City of Ithaca customers $1.26 per month for a "P.E.G. Access Franchise Fee" since the week of July 11, 1994, and Whereas the so-called "P.E.G. Access Franchise Fee" is cannot legally be charged as a franchise fee; and Whereas Time Warner Cable's General Manager Raymond McCabe was publicly informed that this charge is not a "Franchise Fee" by Assistant Deputy Director of the New York State Commission of Cable Television Steven Shaye at the Ithaca public hearing on cable television held in Common Council Chambers on July 13, 1994, and televised on Channel 53; and Whereas Time Warner Cable has taken no voluntary action to correct this situation; Therefore the Ithaca City Cable Commission calls on Time Warner Cable to refund this so-called "franchise fee" in full to each City of Ithaca subscriber that has been charged this "franchise fee" in excess of the amount of franchise fee allowed by federal law; and Be it further resolved that Time Warner Cable will desist from listing P.E.G.Access Franchise Fee on its bills to city subscribers. 'Pike & Fisher's cable Act: Law and Legislative History, p484 T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E Response to Resolution Passed Unanimously by the Ithaca City Cable Commission October 25, 1994: P.E.G. ACCESS FRANCHISE FEE We believe our practice of itemizing the operating costs of P.E.G. Access on subscribers' bills and identifying as a franchise fee is in compliance with applicable Federal law. We will, however, act on the Commission's suggestion and change the name to P.E.G. Access Fee. The call for a refund is unwarranted and not supported by the franchise or applciable Federal law. The price for Basic service is below the $15.37 per month ceiling identified in the Franchise even when The PEG Access franchise fee and the 5% Franchise Fee is added. 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 Gary R.Matz Assistant General Counsel T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E January 24, 1995 Ms. Jean Finley Chairperson Ithaca Cable Commission City of Ithaca Ithaca,NY 14850 Dear Ms. Finley: I am writing at the request of Mr. Ray McCabe the General Manager of our cable television system serving the Ithaca,New York area. It is my understanding that representatives of the City have inquired about certain documents related to the Time Warner Entertainment-Advance/Newhouse Partnership which were referenced or identified in our FCC Form 394 filing as being confidential and proprietary. I would like to assure you and the City of Ithaca that those various documents do not, in any way, affect the System or the operation of the System serving Ithaca. Those documents address certain topics such as tax and accounting policies, Advance/Newhouse cable systems located in the US West service area(i.e. the states ofNebraska and Wyoming), employee benefits and the accounting treatment to be afforded certain Systems partially owned by Time Warner. I appreciate the City's interest in this transaction. I trust that we have answered other questions that you may have and that this letter will satisfactorily address those questions you had regarding these confidential documents. Thank you for your continuing cooperation and assistance. Ve t o r , Gary Matz cc: Ray McCa Time Warner Cable 300 First Stamford Place Stamford CT 06902-6732 Tel 203.328.4865 Fax 203.328.4840 A tlini+rnn n(Timo W--F.t—t+ J...e..+++rn.....,...., t P CITY OF ITHACA 108 EAST GREEN STREET ITHACA, NEW YORK 14850 OFFICE OF TELEPHONE: (607)274-6504 CITY ATTORNEY FAX: (607)272-7348 May 16, 1995 Raymond McCabe, Manager Time Warner 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 Dear Mr. McCabe: I am in receipt of a copy of the letter to you from the New York State Commission on Cable Television dated May 11, 1995. In that letter the issues of refunds for persons who subscribed to Cable Plus prior to September 21, 1994, and the issue of how PEG access related payments are reflected on subscribers bills were addressed. I would appreciate it if you would let me know, at your earliest convenience, what Time Warner's response to this is, so that I can report that to Council. Of course, if you have question or wish to discuss the matter in more detail, don't hesitate to call me. Very truly yours, Charles Guttman City Attorney CG/cw n• "An Equal Opportunity Employer with an Affirmative Action Program" tiM Recycled Paper L `.•r .i10E{VED MAY i s 1595 �f TRE NEW YORK STATE >�f ' COMMISSION ON CABLE TELEVISION 5 EMPIRE STATE PLAZA ALBANY, NEW YORK 12223-1552 (518)474-4992 FAX(518)486-5727 May 11, 1995 Ray McCabe, Manager American Community Cable 519 W. State St. Ithaca, NY 14850 Dear Mr. McCabe: As you know, the City of Ithaca by resolution adopted October 25, 1994 has expressed reservations concerning your company's introduction of a CablePlus service tier as well as the treatment of public access commitments on subscriber's bills. The Commission's Consumer Services Unit has previously inquired about the facts and circumstances concerning the introduction of a CablePlus tier. From your response, dated March 2, 1995, it is my understanding that the material facts are as follows: 1. that the CablePlus tier is comprised of four programming services -- CNN, ESPN, The Learning Channel and Comedy Central -- all of which were previously available as part of basic cable service but which were removed to a separate "scrambled" CablePlus tier and marketed as a separate option to subscribers; 2. that the four CablePlus channels were originally intended to be removed from basic service on July 15, 1994 at which time basic service was reduced from $15.37 to $12.29; 3. that on or about June 17, ACC mailed a newsletter to subscribers which described the changes in basic service and the CablePlus tier as well as the availability of three new channels -- Encore, ESPN 2 and the Cartoon Network -- on an a la carte basis; 4. that the newsletter indicated that a subscriber who wished to continue receiving the four channels comprising the CablePlus tier at $1.34/month plus an addressable converter "must subscribe before July 20;" T 1 M E W A R H E R j' JUN 131995 June 1, 1995 Ms. Anne V. Dalton,Director Consumer Services Unit New York State Commission on Cable Television 5 Empire State Plaza Albany,NY 12223-1552 Re: Cable Plus Service Tier PEG Access Fees Dear Ms. Dalton: This letter is in response to the concerns detailed in your correspondence dated May 11, 1995. Although we do not agree with the description of the introduction of the Cable Plus package set forth in your letter of May 11, 1995,we will reluctantly agree to your refund request. This acquiescence is not an admission of any liability or wrongdoing on our part nor does it reflect the position we would have taken had this issue been pursued in a legal or administrative proceeding. We are pleased that overall we have managed to minimize inconvenience to our customers during a time of significant change. Pursuant to your request, please be advised that we are in the process of determining the num of customers affected and the amount of refund to be issued. We plan to complete the process within 10 days in preparation for refiinds in July and August. Credits will be offered to our existing qualifying customers in the following manner and will appear on their monthly billing: Revenue earned between July 21st and August 18th will be divided equally among Cable Plus customers on record as of August 18, 1994. Revenue earned between August 19th and September 12th will be divided equally among Cable Plus customers on record as of September 12th, 1994. 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 June 1, 1995 Ms. Arne V.Dahoq Director Page 2 A separate response will be forthcoming regarding the public, educational and governmental access Mated payments issue. Presently,we are attempting to understand your concerns and contemplating options. Our cm"has attempted to contact John Grow to further discuss this matter. Should you have any questions,please feel free to contact me. ely, Ra H. McCabe Area Manager cc: The Honorable Benjamin Nichols,Mayor, City of Ithaca Jean Finley, Chairperson, Ithaca Cable Commission John L. Grow, Counsel Steven A Shaye,Director Municipal Assistance AUL 2 7 1996 { NEW YORK STATE COMMISSION ON CABLE TELEVISION Fxceis1oa' 5 EMPIRE STATE PLAZA ALBANY, NEW YORK 12223-1552 (518) 474-2212 FAX (518)473-2965 July 25, 1995 Mr. Ray McCabe Manager American Community Cable 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 Dear Mr. McCabe: This is to acknowledge receipt of your June 29, 1995 correspondence, outlining the. amount of credit and number of qualified Cable Plus subscribers to receive said credit for the periods, July 31, 1994 - August 31, 1994 and September 1, 1994 - September 12 , 1994. These credits address the concerns raised by the Commission relative to the introduction of Cable Plus service last July. American Community Cable is directed to process the appropriate credits as expeditiously as possible and to provide the Commission with a statement and/or documents indicating issuance of refunds to all affected subscribers. Sincerely, 1 U An * Dalton Director, Consumer Services AVD;glr cc: The Honorable Benjamin Nichols, Mayor, City of Ithaca Jean Finley, Chairperson, Ithaca Cable Commission John L. Grow, Counsel, CCTV Steven A.Shaye, Director Municipal Assistance, CCTV T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E 4. ` gt �j�,, �7 r .+ June 29, 1995 Ms. Anne V. Dalton, Director Consumer Service Unit New York State Commission on Cable Television 5 Empire State Plaza Albany, NY 12223-1552 Re: Cable Plus Service Tier Dear Ms. Dalton: As requested in your June 8, 1995 correspondence, the following subscriber numbers and dollar amounts represents total customers and credits that are being issued to our existing qualifying customers. We have two billing cycles in which subscribers were charged. Cycle A represents billing from the 1st through the 31st of each month, while Cycle B subscribers are billed from the 15th to the 15th of each month. We are crediting 3722 Cycle A subscribers that were billed for CablePlus from 7/31/94 - 9/12/94, each $2.44. The total for Cycle A credits represents $9081.68 We have credited 5194 Cycle B subscribers that were billed for CablePlus from 7/15/94 - 9/12/94, each $3.31. The total for Cycle B represents $17, 192.14. Total existing subscribers credited is 8916. Total credits amount $26,273.82. The Cycle A credit of$2.44 was determined by taking the subscribers billed for the period of 7/31/94 - 8/31/94 and crediting back the full $1.74 per month charge for CablePlus. The additional $.70 is a prorate for the service from 9/1/94 - 9/12/94. 272-3456 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 1-800-676-2225 w A+ The Cycle B credit of$3.31 was determined by taking the subscribers billed for period of 7/15/94 - 8/15/94 and crediting back the full $1.74 per month charge for CablePlus. The additional $1.57 is a prorate for the service from 8/16/94 - 9/12/94. Due to the extensive manual labor involved in determining the start date of service for each individual subscribers, we have credited all subscribers in each cycle, the same amounts. We will begin applying the credits upon written approval from you. We appreciate your time and patience in this matter. Sincerely, AX7-- Doc McQuade Business Manager cc: The Honorable Benjamin Nichols, Mayor, City of Ithaca Jean Finley, Chairperson, Ithaca Cable Commission John L. Grow, Counsel Steven A. Shaye, Director Municipal Assistance i T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E t ` ' June 29, 1995 Ms. Anne V. Dalton, Director Consumer Service Unit New York State Commission on Cable Television 5 Empire State Plaza Albany, NY 12223-1552 Re: Cable Plus Service Tier Dear Ms. Dalton: As requested in your June 8, 1995 correspondence, the following subscriber numbers and dollar amounts represents total customers and credits that are being issued to our existing qualifying customers. We have two billing cycles in which subscribers were charged. Cycle A represents billing from the 1st through the 31st of each month, while Cycle B subscribers are billed from the 15th to the 15th of each month. We are crediting 3722 Cycle A subscribers that were billed for CablePlus from 7/31/94 - 9/12/94, each $2.44. The total for Cycle A credits represents $9081.68 We have credited 5194 Cycle B subscribers that were billed for CablePlus from 7/15/94 - 9/12/94, each $3.31. The total for Cycle B represents $17, 192.14. Total existing subscribers credited is 8916. Total credits amount to $26,273.82. The Cycle A credit of$2.44 was determined by taking the subscribers billed for the period of 7/31/94 - 8/31/94 and crediting back the full $1.74 per month charge for CablePlus. The additional $.70 is a prorate for the service from 9/1/94 - 9/12/94. 272-3456 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 1-800-676-2225 The Cycle B credit of$3.31 was determined by taking the subscribers billed for period of 7/15/94 - 8/15/94 and crediting back the full $1.74 per month charge for CablePlus. The additional $1.57 is a prorate for the service from 8/16/94 - 9/12/94. Due to the extensive manual labor involved in determining the start date of service for each individual subscribers,we have credited all subscribers in each cycle, the same amounts. We will begin applying the credits upon written approval from you. We appreciate your time and patience in this matter. Sincerely, `j Doc McQuade Business Manager cc: The Honorable Benjamin Nichols, Mayor, City of Ithaca V' Jean Finley, Chairperson, Ithaca Cable Commission John L. Grow, Counsel Steven A. Shaye, Director Municipal Assistance T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E August 4, 1995 _-- rr Ms. Julie Holcomb, Clerk City of Ithaca S� 8 City Hall 108 E. Green Street �U Ithaca,NY 14850 Dear Ms.Holcomb: I am pleased to inform you that Time Warner Cable has negotiated a proposed Social Contract with the FCC that will provide a number of benefits to our customers and which resolves all pending FCC rate complaints concerning Time Warner. The FCC announced the proposed contract August 3, 1995 and placed it on public notice. Interested parties may submit comments to the FCC within a 30-day period and a 15-day reply period. The contract provides for the assurance of fair and reasonable rates for all of our cable customers;the creation of a low-cost "lifeline"basic service; a commitment to upgrade the channel capacity and technical reliability of our cable systems, and a reduction in the administrative resources and costs of regulation for local governments, the FCC and Time Warner. The key terms of the contract include: ► Lower basic rates by an additional 10%with an offsetting increase on CPST and create a low- cost lifeline basic service that will remain affordable for low and fixed income families; ► Provide annual price "caps" allowing increases only for inflation and external costs on Basic and an additional$1.00 on the CPST; ► Upgrade its systems to 550/750 I HM fiber-rich architecture at a cost of$4 billion; ► Customers in systems where rates were subject to a refund liability will receive more than$5 million in refunds in the form of bill credits; ► Provide one free drop with basic and CPST service to 100% of the public schools passed by our cable systems; ► Provide free of charge a connection and necessary equipment to the new TWC/Time Inc. on- line computer service to public schools in systems that carry the service; and ► Develop educational materials, including instructional notebooks and videos for teachers explaining how to use the new technologies of TWC's broadband cable system for educational 519 West State Street Ithaca, New York 14850 272-7875 r applications. This contract is significant in that, it will give cities an opportunity to lock in many benefits for consumers such as system upgrades that will enhance reliability, picture quality and channel capacity,as well as additional cable and on-line services for schools. At the same time, it allows the FCC to settle a number of cases in a way that efficiently offers benefits to consumers and provides Time,Aarner with predictable though modest, rate increases that allow us to upgrade our network 'with i feasonable return without creating a "rate shock" scenario for our customers. .. .T„.�. The FCC is requesting comments on the proposed contract, and I would appreciate it if you would consider writing in support of the contract. While the benefits of its adoption are obvious, there is nothing in the contract that would preclude a city from negotiating an enhanced package during franchise renewal. Comments should be sent to: Federal Communications Commission Cable Service Bureau 11919 M Street,N.W. Washington,DC 20554 Attached are copies of the Time Warner and the FCC press releases, along with a copy of the Dn Ic Social Contract.I will call you shortly to set up a meeting with you and to answer any questions you >in G�� may have. phi c� Thank you for your consideration, and we hope that, after reviewing the many benefits of the proposed contract terms,you will support Time Warner Cable's and the FCC's efforts. Sincerely, - d i�z -- C4, RaymonMcCabe (,✓�'t tGi L ) Area Manager / The Honorable Ben Nichols Ms. Jean Finley, Chair of the Cable Commission ■ 4T/�� *4p T I M E W A R N E R C A B L E FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Michael Luftman August 3, 1995 (203) 328-0613 TIME WARNER AGREES WITH FCC TO RATE CUTS AND CAPS, REBATES, UPGRADES AND MAJOR NEW SUPPORT FOR LOCAL SCHOOLS Time Warner Cable has signed a proposed "social contract" with the Federal Communications Commission that will provide its customers and the cities where it operates with a wide range of benefits. These include lower basic rates, rate stability through price caps for basic cable and the cable programming satellite tier (CPST), more than $5 million in refunds, upgrade of all its cable systems and substantial support for public schools. The contract will also resolve all outstanding rate cases involving Time Warner Cable before the FCC. "We are very pleased to have been able to work so productively with the FCC to resolve these issues in a way that benefits our customers, local schools, the cities where we do business and our company,' said Joseph J. Collins, chairman and CEO of Time Warner Cable. "Our customers can be assured of lower basic rates including a 'lifeline' basic tier that will remain affordable for many low and fixed income families. Many also will receive a refund. Public schools will benefit from substantial support ensuring them (more) Time Warner Cable 300 First Stamford Place Stamford CT 06902-6732 Tel 203.328.0600 Fax 203.328.0690 A Division of Time Warner Entertainment Company,L.P r Page 2 access to the latest telecommunications technology. Communities will benefit from our commitment to upgrade our networks with the latest fiber optic technology, assuring the most reliable service possible." The major components of the social contract are: ** Time Warner Cable will reduce the price of basic cable by an additional 10%, beyond the 17% rollbacks of the past two years with an offsetting increase on CPST. This price reduction will create a lifeline basic service that will remain even more affordable for low and fixed income families. The price of this service will be capped, with adjustments permitted only once a year for changes in external costs and inflation. ** The company will cap prices for the CPST, raising the monthly charge on a customer's bill by no more than $1.00 each year other than for changes in external costs and inflation. ** The company will make refunds to all customers in systems where its rates were subject to refund liability. The refunds will be in the form of bill credits. ** Time Warner will, over the next five years, upgrade its operations with fiber optic technology at a cost of$4 billion. This will dramatically improve reliability, picture quality and channel capacity. ** All public schools in the company's service areas will be provided with free cable service and additional support including free schedules of educational programming as well as a free training video and brochures for teachers that will help them understand the latest advances in telecommunications technology and how they can be applied to education. (more) Z Page 3 Time Warner is developing a high-speed on-line service for personal computers using cable's high-speed delivery system. When that service is launched in any of the company's cable systems, each school in the system will receive a free hookup, including a cable modem, and hands-on training for teachers on the use of the service. In addition, the FCC and Time Warner said they expect the agreement will reduce the administrative burden and cost of regulation for local governments, the FCC and the company. News media Information 202!418.0500 Recorded listing of release and texts W`3•u�� 2021418-2222 Federal Communications Commission 1919 - M Street, N.W. Washington, D. C. 20554 s it nn noun nr-dF C6-dwfilsVon WIon. Ralasse of the TuRof a CommiVelon ordet constitutes mf:elal salon. See MCI V.FCC.515 F 2d 899(D.C.Circ 1974} August 3, 1995 COMMISSION AND TIME WARNER CABLE NEGOTIATE SOCIAL CONTRACT; COMMISSION REQUESTS PUBLIC COMMENT The Commission and Time Warner Cable (TWC) have, negotiated a Social Contract (Contract) that will, if finally adopted by the Commission, provide for the upgrading of TWC's cable systems. The proposed Contract was negotiated in accordance with the Commission's authority to consider and adopt "social contracts" as alternatives to other regulatory approaches applicable to cable television rates. If adopted, the proposed Contract will assure fair and reasonable rates for TWC's customers, reduce the administrative burden and costs of regulation for local governments, the CommissioI and TWC, and resolve 946 cable programming services tier rate complaints on file with the Commission. The proposed Contract is designed to improve TWC's service by substantially upgrading the channel capacity and technical reliability of its United States cable systems. i The Commission requests public comment. Comments on the proposed Contract are due by September 5, 1995. Reply comments axe due by September 20, 1995. A Public Notice (FCC 95-336), entitled "Social Contract for Time Warner Cable Available for Comment" has been released today. Important elements of the proposed Contract include: • A commitment by TWC to upgrade its domestic cible systems at a cost of$4 billion over the next 5 years. • A TWC commitment to establish lifeline basic service tiers priced at 10%b below TWC's benchmark regulated rates. TWC will be allowed to recoup reduced basic service tier revenue through price increases on its cable programming service tiers. • The total increase for all regulated programming sbrvices provided by TWC will be capped at $1 per year for each of the next five years, plus external costs and inflation. • An estimated $4.7 million plus interest in subscriber refunds, in the form of subscriber bill credits. • TWC will provide free service connections at one nutlet in 100% of the existing public schools (K-12) passed by its cable gystems. Additionally, it will provide service connections at Bost in secondary private schools that receive funding under Title I of the elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. TWC will provide the connected schools with a monthly educational program guide having curriculum support ideas to assist educators in effectively using the new services. Any internal wiring needed by the connected schools for additional outlets will be provided by TWC at cost. • Upon successful development by TWC and Time Inc. of an on-line service for personal computers, TWC will, upon request, provide the cable connected schools (public or private) with one free modem, and additional modems will be made available to such schools at cost. As available in each service area, TWC will provide its on-line service free through each modem during the school year. • TWC subscribers will have the right to remove, replace, rearrange or maintain any cable wiring located in the interior space of their dwelling unit. • In systems where TWC and its predecessors did not create a la carte packages, TWC can create migrated product tiers (NPTs) consisting of up to four services migrated from regulated tiers. The migrated channels, will be priced at their rate regulated prices. • In the case of Newhouse systems acquired by TWC that had a la carte packages, TWC will be able to convert Newhouse's "Superstation" a la carte packages (typically three supetstations and one satellite channel) into NPTs, priced at current rates (which in no case exceed 29 cents per channel). Another MPT can be created on such systems consisting of satellite channels offered on other, low penetration; a la carte packages. These NPTs will be priced at their current per channel rates. The cumulative number of services migrated from the "Superstation" and other a la carte packages cannot be greater than six. All remaining channels in Newhouse's a la carte packages will be returned to the traditionally rate-regulated service tiers. • Where TWC created a la carte packages that received new product tier (NPT) treatment on systems that are contiguous with systems where MPTs will be created, TWC will have the option to lower the prices of the NPTs and raise the prices of the adjacent MPT,s in a revenue neutral manner to TWC to provide uniform,rates for the systems. The NPTs will then be subject to the price cap increases applicable to NPTs. • TWC may add an unlimited number of channels to an MPT at a price of 20 cents per channel plus license-fees. After April 1997, TWC may 2 convert the MPTs to NPTs withm et constrained pricing, as permitted by the Commission's go- forward rulek. • The resolution of pending rate casesi is without any' finding by the Commission of any wrongdoing by tVC. Cable Services Bureau Chief Meredith Jones commented, "This agreement with Time Warner Cable is another example of an ijinovative solution to regulatory and business issues of great complexity. The reaction to the earlier Social;Contract with Continental has been highly positive. This Contract will provide TWC subscribers with upgraded, reliable service. It provides rate stability for TWC subscribers and resolves nearly one thousand rate complaints. This Contract also extends free cable service to all public schools in TWC service areas. Permitting TWC subscribers to ielocate intern4l cable wiring in their home is an innovative consumer friendly feature." News Media contact: Morgan Broman at (202)1416-0852; Cable Services Bureau contacts: Nancy Markowitz, Jerome Powlkes and JoAnn'Lucanik at (202) 416-0800 3 PUBLIC NOTICE use FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION 1919 M STREET, N.W. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20554 News media information 202/418-0500 Recorded listing of releases and texts 202/632-0002. FCC 95-336 August 3, 1995 SOCIAL CONTRACT FOR TIME WARNER CABLE AVAILABLE FOR COMMENT THE COMMISSION SEEKS COMMENT ON A PROPOSED SOCIAL CONTRACT WITH TIME WARNER CABLE THAT PROVIDES INCREASED INVESTMENT IN CABLE TV INFRASTRUCTURE; ASSURES RATE STABILITY; PROVIDES FOR RESOLUTION OF RATE CASES; AND PROVIDES REFUNDS OF UP TO APPROXIMATELY $4.7 MILLION PLUS INTEREST TO AFFECTED SUBSCRIBERS Time Warner Cable (TWC) and the Federal Communications Commission have negotiated a proposed social contract (Contract). The proposed Contract was negotiated pursuant to the Commission's authority to regulate cable services under Title VI of the Communications Act and the Commission's February 22, 1994 decision that it would consider social contracts as an alternative form of regulation for cable operators. The proposed Contract will be considered for approval after evaluating public comment on this proposed agreement. This notice and the proposed Contract are being mailed to each person who has filed a rate complaint with respect to one of TWC's systems, and to all franchising authorities that have granted a cable franchise to TWC. This notice contains a summary description of the proposed Contract; the terms of the proposed Contract, however, will be controlling and interested persons should read the proposed Contract in its entirety. Copies of the proposed Contract can be obtained in the manner described below. The proposed Contract is designed to improve TWC's cable service by substantially upgrading the channel capacity and technical reliability of its United States cable systems. In addition, the proposed Contract will assure fair and reasonable rates for TWC's cable service customers and reduce the administrative burden and costs of regulation for local governments, the Commission, and TWC. The five-year proposed Contract covers cable programming service tiers in all of TWC's cable franchises, including those that are currently unregulated because no complaint has been filed against the cable programming services tier. Thus, the Contract will provide rate stability and other benefits for TWC's customers regardless of th,:it regulatory status. It also provides for the creation of a low-priced basic service tier. TWC serves approximately 9.7 million subscribers. Under the 1992 Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act, a basic service tier is the tiet of programming that contains at a minimum local broadcast stations. Cable programming services tiers are all other cable services, except those sold on a per channel or per program basis. Specifically, the proposed Contract provides for the investment of$4 billion to rebuild and upgrade all of TWC's domestic cable systems during the period from 1995 to 2000, including deployment of fiber optic technology, increased channel capacity and improved system reliability and signal quality. At least 60% of the new analog capacity added as a result of the upgrade will be used for regulated cable programming services tiers, and, on average, regulated cable programming services offered on the upgraded systems will contain at least 15 additional channels. The proposed Contract provides for the resolution and termination of TWC's pending cable programming services cases, including cable programming services cases against the systems TWC recently acquired from Houston Industries (KBLCOM) and Newhouse Broadcasting Corporation. To resolve these cases, TWC will make cash refunds in the form of bill credits to affected customers totalling approximately $4.7 million plus interest. Basic service tier benchmark cases currently pending before local franchising authorities would not be resolved by the proposed Contract. Those cases will continue to be resolved by TWC and the local franchising authorities pursuant to Commission rules. TWC will provide its subscribers with a low-cost basic service tier. To accomplish this, TWC will reduce its basic service tier rates on systems serving at least 85% of TWC's total subscribers to a level 10% below the current rates. TWC will be permitted to offset each of the 10% reductions by increasing the rate for its cable programming services tier. TWC also will restructure the basic service tier on any remaining systems so as to create a lifeline basic tier. TWC will not increase the programming on any basic service tier for the term of this Contract, except where required by applicable law or regulation or contract lawfully entered into pursuant to such law or regulation, or to provide additional local origination channels. However, local franchising authorities may elect not to have this low-cost service created within their franchise areas. In light of the upgrade commitment contained in the proposed Contract, TWC will be permitted to increase the monthly rates for the cable programming services tier by $1.00 during each year of the Contract. On each system, the increase will be added to the cable programming services tier having the greatest number of subscribers. During the life of the proposed Contract, the only other permitted increases to TWC's cable programming services tier rates will be for inflation and increases in external costs. During the period of the proposed Contract, TWC will not avail itself of any additional per-channel adjustment permitted by the Commission's Going Forward rules for any programming services added to the cable programming services tier after the effective date of the contract. TWC also will forego its right to use cost of service justifications to support 2 any future rate increases for any systems covered by the proposed Contract during the period that the proposed Contract is in effect. If TWC fails to meet the upgrade commitment within the term provided for under the Contract, subscribers to the cable systems that have not been upgraded will be entitled to appropriate refunds equal to the cable programming services rate increases provided by the Contract, with interest, plus a liquidated damages penalty of 15% of such amount. Under the proposal, in the systems where TWC and its predecessors did not create a la carte packages, TWC will be permitted to create migrated product tiers consisting of up to 4 services migrated from the regulated tiers. The migrated channels will be priced at the rate regulated price with increases allowed for inflation and external costs. There will be no limit on the number of channels that TWC may add to the migrated product tiers at the price of 20 cents per channel plus license fees. After April 1, 1997, TWC may convert any migrated product tier to a new product tier with market constrained pricing as permitted by the Going Forward rules. For the Newhouse systems acquired by TWC that had a la carte packages, TWC will be permitted to create migrated product tiers. Where the system had a "superstation" a la carte package (typically three superstations and one satellite channel), the package will become a migrated product tier, initially priced at their current rates which are less than 29 cents per channel (exclusive of copyright fees). TWC will also be allowed to create another migrated product tier consisting of satellite channels located in other a la carte packages as long as the cumulative number of migrated services is no greater than six. These channels will be priced at the current per channel rate. (Newhouse's non-superstation a la carte packages were created from tiers that were affirmatively marketed and had traditionally low penetration rates of basic subscribers). TWC will be able to add an unlimited number of new channel offerings at the rate of 20 cents per channel plus license fees to these migrated product tiers. The remaining Newhouse channels from the a la carte packages will be put back in benchmark regulated cable programming services tiers. The rates for these tiers will increase due to the addition of these channels; however, the increases will be limited to not more than 25 cents per channel (including license fees). In systems where TWC has created a la carte packages which are being treated as new product tiers in areas contiguous with franchises where migrated product tiers will be created pursuant to the proposed Contract, TWC will be permitted to lower the prices of the new product tiers and raise the prices of the adjacent migrated product tiers in a revenue neutral manner to TWC to provide uniform rates in those systems. In those circumstances, the new product tiers will be subject to the price cap increases applicable to migrated product tiers. TWC will be permitted to establish prices for equipment and various installation functions based on averaged costs for all its systems on a geographic regional basis. 3 If the Commission adopts rules providing for annual adjustments to rates for basic service tiers and cable programming service tiers, TWC will comply with those rules and adjust its rates no more than annually. TWC will offer a cable connection to 100% of the public schools passed by its cable systems. Those connections will be provided free of charge to all such schools requesting connections. TWC also will provide a cable connection at cost to all secondary private schools that receive funding under Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Further, if any internal wiring installation is needed at the connected schools, it will be provided at the TWC system's cost of materials and labor. Such additional internal wiring will be provided to public schools without charge if TWC is able to coordinate with other comparable electrical wiring installation in cases of new construction or substantial rehabilitation of existing schools. Basic service tier and cable programming services tier service will be provided to each outlet in connected schools at no charge. TWC will provide a free monthly educational program listing to each connected school. TWC also will develop and provide to connected schools materials for teachers that explain the educational applications of TWC's broadband cable systems. Finally, upon successful development by TWC and Time Inc. of an on-line service for personal computers, TWC will provide each connected public school with a free connection to this on-line service to the extent it is available on the local cable system. Upon request, each connecting school will receive one free modem and access to the service for use during the school year. TWC also has agreed to provide additional modems to the school at cost. TWC will sponsor a workshop in each franchise area to educate teachers and to provide them with an opportunity for hands-on training. Prior to a customer's termination of cable service, TWC systems will not restrict the ability of customers to remove, replace, rearrange or maintain any cable wiring located within the interior space of their dwelling units. TWC will provide customers with a notification upon commencement of service, and annually thereafter, advising them of their rights (i) to remove, replace, rearrange or maintain the home wiring themselves, (ii) to select a qualified third party contractor, and (iii) to request the TWC system provide such service at standard hourly installation rates, plus materials at cost. TWC systems will offer to supply such materials to subscribers at cost. Parties wishing to comment on the proposed Contract should do so by filing with the Secretary no later than September 5, 1995 an original and four copies of their comments. Replies may be filed no later than September 20, 1995. All such pleadings should reference the file number noted above. The proposed contract is available for reference in the Cable Services Bureau's public reference room, Room 333 at 2033 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. Copies are available from the Commission's copy contractor, International Transcription Services, at Room 246, 1919 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20554, telephone number (202) 857-1433. The contract is also available via Internet at FCC.GOV. For further information, contact JoAnn Lucanik, Nancy Markowitz or Jerome Fowlkes at (202) 416-0800. 4 r Media contact: Morgan Broman at (202) 416-0852. --FCC-- 5 DRAFT SOCIAL CONTRACT FOR TIME WARNER CABLE TABLE OF CONTENTS Page I. BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 II. DEFINITIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 III. TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE SOCIAL CONTRACT . . . . . . . . . . . 3 A. Basic Service Tier Rate Relief . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 1. Creation of a Low-Cost, Lifeline Basic Service Tier . . . . . . . . . 3 2. BST Price Cap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 -3. Additions To Basic Service Tier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 B. Equipment Rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 C. Resolution Of Existing CPST Rate Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 D. Migrated Product Tiers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 E. Customer Refunds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 F. Infrastructure Upgrade Requirement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 1. Upgrade Requirement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 2. No Impairment Of Local Authority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 3. Reporting Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 4. CPST Rates Subject To Price Cap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5. Failure To Meet Target . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 6. Adjustments To Systems Subject To Contract . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 - G. BST And CPST Rate Stability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 H. Additional Consumer Benefits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1. Service To Public Schools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 2. Home Wiring . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 - ii - I. Miscellaneous Provisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 1. Modification And Termination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 2. Authority To Enforce Contract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 3. All Necessary Waivers And Preemptions Deemed Granted . . . . . 19 4. Effect On Other Proceedings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 5. No Admission Of Wrongdoing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 6. Contract In Public Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 7. Legal Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 8. Effective Date And Term . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 9. Public Notice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 10. Force Majeure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 11. Severability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 12. Entire Understanding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 SOCIAL CONTRACT FOR TIME WARNER CABLE I. BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY. The' "Social Contract" set out in this document (the "Contract") relates to certain services and equipment offered by Time Warner Cable ("TWC") actually or potentially subject to regulation under the terms of the applicable provisions of Title VI of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended ("Act"). The Federal Communications Commission ("FCC" or "Commission") finds that this Contract will advance the public interest by: (i) assuring fair and reasonable rates for TWC's cable service customers; (ii) facilitating the creation of a low-cost, lifeline basic service level; (iii) improving TWC's cable service by substantially upgrading the channel capacity and technical reliability of its cable systems; and (iv) reducing the administrative burden and cost of regulation for local governments, the FCC and TWC. The Contract has been negotiated between TWC and the FCC in accordance with the FCC's authority to consider and adopt "social contracts" as an alternative to other regulatory approaches applicable to cable television rates,'- and its authority to regulate TWC's cable services under the Act, particularly in light of the Statement of Policy set forth in Section 2(b) of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Pub. L. No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460 ("1992 Cable Act"). Except as otherwise provided for herein, this Contract covers all of TWC's cable systems as of the Publication Date (as hereinafter defined). '-'Cost of Service Order, 9 FCC Rcd 4527, 11295-304 (1994); Public Notice, FCC 95-137 (April 3, 1995). - 2 - IL DEFINITIONS. The following terms shall have the meanings set forth below. Certain other terms are defined elsewhere herein. A. "Basic Service Tier" or "BST" means the cable service level which includes the signals of any local television broadcast stations and any public, educational or. governmental access channel required by the relevant franchise to be carried on the BST. B. "Cable Programming Service Tier" or "CPST" means any tier of video programming.service, but shall not include (i) video programming carried on BST; (ii) video programming when offered on a per channel, multiplexed, a la cane or per program basis; (iii) any Migrated Product Tier; or (iv) any New Product Tier as defined by the Going Forward Rules. C. "Cost" means that the prices so designated have been designed to recover actual costs, including a reasonable rate of return as defined in the FCC Cost of Service Order, supra, at 1207. D. "Current Rates" means those TWC system rates that are in effect as of the Publication Date, or rates that will become effective after the Publication Date and for which notice was given to subscribers on or before the Publication Date. E. "CVI" means Cablevision Industries Inc., its subsidiaries and affiliates. F. "Effective Date" means the date on which the FCC releases an order approving_this Contract. G.- "Eligible Subscribers" means those CPST subscribers to any of TWC's cable systems listed on Appendix A to this Contract at the time Refunds are issued. - 3 - H. "Going Forward Rules" means the FCC's rules adopted in the Sixth Order on Reconsideration, 76 RR 2d 859 (1994), including all subsequent clarifications and amendments. I. "Migrated Product Tier" or "MPT" means (a) a tier consisting of up to four services moved from a system's existing BST or CPST(s) as described in Section III.D.5. or (b) any Superstation Tier or any tier consisting of those services remaining on a Preferred Tier, as defined in Section III.D.1., after any excess channels have been shifted to CPST as described in Section III.D.3. J. "Publication Date" means the date on which the Commission releases its initial Public Notice relating to this Contract. K. "Refund" means a prospective bill credit issued to Eligible Subscribers. L. "Time Warner Cable" or "TWC" means the collective reference to Time Warner Entertainment Company, L.P. ("TWE"), TWI Cable Inc. ("TWI Cable") and Time Warner Entertainment-Advance/Newhouse Partnership ("TWE-A/N"), or any subsidiary, division or affiliate thereof, or, where consistent with the context, any cable system owned or managed by TWE, TWI Cable or TWE-A/N, except where particular provisions of this Contract specify a more limited scope. III. TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE SOCIAL CONTRACT. A. Basic Service Tier Rate Relief. 1. Creation of a Low-Cost. Lifeline Basic Service Tier. a. In order to provide its subscribers with the option to purchase a low-cost BST, no later than six months after the Effective Date, TWC will reduce its BST r - 4 - rates on systems serving at least 85% of TWC's total subscribers to a level 10% below the Current RAtes. In any system where the BST rates are initially reduced by 10% as described above, but where BST rates are pending review on the Publication Date, TWC will reduce its BST rates further by 10% from the level ultimately determined to be reasonable, after such determination is no longer subject to review or appeal. TWC may increase its CPST rate(s) in any system by an amount necessary to recoup the reduction in revenues due to the 10% adjustment in the BST rate in that system. A local franchising authority ("LFA") may elect not to have TWC implement the BST rate reduction described in this paragraph in its franchise area by providing notice to TWC and the Commission no later than 45 days following the Effective Date. Such notice shall (a) be in writing, (b) be addressed to the Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission, 1919 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20554, with a copy to Time Warner Cable, 300 First Stamford Place, Stamford, CT 06902-6732, attention: General Counsel, (c) identify the local franchising authority, the community unit identification number for the franchise area, and (d) reflect the clear intent to not have TWC implement the BST rate reduction described in Section III.A.La of this Contract. However, such notice need not meet any other requirements and may be in letter form. b. In order to achieve its goal of creating low-cost BSTs, TWC will restructure the BST on the remaining systems where the BST has not been reduced by 10% as described above so as to create a lifeline-type service. Such restructuring will involve shifting channels from the BST to an existing or newly created CPST and will not be deemed by the FCC to be a "fundamental change" of any affected service tier. At the time of such restructuring, the BST rate will be reduced by an amount equal to the percentage of - 5 - the BST channels shifted to CPST. Where the BST channels are shifted to a newly created CPST, the"rate for the CPST will be equal to the amount of the reduction in the BST rate. Where the BST channels are shifted to an existing CPST, the rate of the existing CPST will be increased by an amount necessary to recoup the reduction in revenues resulting from the reduction in the BST rate as described above. The 10% BST rate reduction, with CPST offset, will be implemented upon restructuring of such remaining systems. Nothing herein shall be deemed to affect any otherwise enforceable franchise provision relating to programming services to be provided by TWC. 2. BST Price Can. After implementation of the 10% BST rate reduction described above, all such reduced BST rates will be subject to a price cap, even in currently unregulated TWC systems. TWC will continue to be permitted to adjust BST rates for changes in external costs and inflation, subject to any necessary LFA approval. The BST rate reduction referred to above will have no adverse effect on any Form 1210 BST rate adjustment request which may be pending before an LFA as of the Publication Date or thereafter. Nothing herein shall authorize review of the reasonableness of any BST rate adjustments in communities where the LFA has not elected to certify in accordance with Section 76.910 of the Commission's rules. 3. Additions To Basic Service Tier. TWC shall not add any additional channels to any BST for the term of this Contract, except where required by applicable law, regulation or contract lawfully entered into pursuant to such law or regulation, or to provide additional local origination channels or other non-satellite delivered channels. In the event that the FCC's must-carry rules are Y - 6 - repealed or rendered invalid or inapplicable to TWC by a court of competent jurisdiction, TWC will have the right to substitute any programming service not then carried by such system for up to an average (weighted by BST subscribers) of three local television broadcast stations deleted from carriage per system covered by this Contract, but no more than five such substitutions on any given system, even if more than five television broadcast stations are deleted. Such substitutions shall have no impact on BST rates other than due to the net change in programming costs. In the absence of must-carry requirements, however, any local television broadcast stations which TWC continues to carry will be carried on the BST. Any such changes to BST will be made only upon provision of thirty days advance notice to the Commission and to affected LFAs and subscribers. Upon receipt of any necessary LFA approval, TWC will be permitted to implement appropriate BST rate adjustments to reflect any such added or substituted channels. Such adjustments (other than adjustments to BST required by any retransmission consent agreement) shall not be subject to the annual BST adjustment limitation set forth in Section III.G. B. Equipment Rates. TWC will be permitted to establish a blended rate, averaged for each of the following equipment basket categories: (1) hourly service charge, (2) installations, (3) remote control devices, (4) converters, (5) other leased equipment, and (6) customer tier changes by geographic region as reflected on Appendix B to this Contract (and any reasonable modifications to such regions). Equipment rates will be adjusted annually to reflect changes in regional equipment Costs in each category. At least thirty days prior to implementation of the first CPST adjustment authorized pursuant to Section III.F.4., but not sooner than December 1, 1995, TWC will submit a single Form 1205, or equivalent - T - reasonably acceptable to the Commission, for each region to the FCC, and will submit annual updates to such filings thereafter for Commission review. Any data required to support such annual equipment rate adjustments may be based on the four most recent available quarterly financial figures. TWC may begin charging revised equipment and installation rates to customers based upon the updated filing upon thirty days' notice. These revised equipment and installation rates will be subject to refund if the Commission later concludes that lower region-wide rates are called for by such filings and applicable rules. Such region-wide equipment and installation charges as TWC establishes and the Commission approves pursuant to this Contract shall be subject to enforcement by local franchising authorities. Should any LFA find that TWC's equipment and installation rates charged exceed those permitted by the Commission, the LFA may order TWC to make refunds of any excess charges as necessary to comply with the equipment and installation charges permitted by the Commission. C. Resolution Of Existing CPST Rate Cases. 1. All CPST cases or complaints currently pending before the Commission are resolved pursuant to and as a result of the adoption of this Contract, as set forth in Appendix A to this Contract. 2. The Commission has reviewed TWC's pending CPST filings. In light of its review, the covenants and representations contained in this Contract, and in express reliance-thereon, and in order to conserve Commission resources, avoid litigation costs, and achieve the other benefits to the public contained in this Contract, the Commission agrees to resolve all CPST cases and complaints involving TWC currently pending before it. - 8 - 3. In addition to those CPST rates which are subject to proceedings that are being fettled as set forth in Appendix A to this Contract, all other Current Rates, as adjusted for inflation and changes in external costs as of the Publication Date, charged by TWC for CPSTs are deemed reasonable under the Act and the Commission's rules. 4. BST rate disputes will continue to be resolved in the ordinary course, pursuant to applicable FCC rules. D. Migrated Product Tiers. 1. The Commission and TWC acknowledge (i) that certain TWE-A/N systems (the "Migration Systems") have been providing collective offerings of a la cane channels which were created between April 1, 1993 and September 30, 1994 and which consist of one or more (a) low-priced collective offerings, containing primarily superstations, at an average price of less than $0.29 per channel, excluding copyright fees (a "Superstation Tier"), and (b) low-penetrated collective offerings predominantly containing channels which had been affirmatively marketed as a separate tier before being offered on an a la cane basis (a "Preferred Tier") and (ii) that such offerings provided by such Migration Systems cumulatively contain in excess of six channels migrated from BST and/or CPST. 2. Any Superstation Tier offered by a Migration System shall be treated as a separate MPT. The initial price of such MPT will be based on the Current Rate of the Superstation Tier. Where neighboring TWC systems each offer an NPT or MPT consisting primarily-of superstations and such NPT or MPT would be priced differently under the Commission's regulations and this Contract, an adjustment may be made between or among such Current Rates on a revenue neutral basis so that a uniform rate for such NPTs/MPTs a - 9 - may be established. In selecting services to be returned to a CPST in accordance with paragraph 3 below, the,'Migration System serving Charlotte, North Carolina and surrounding areas may move services from a Superstation Tier in an effort to achieve a more uniform line-up among such adjacent NPT's and MPT's. All such uniformly priced NPTs/MPTs shall be subject to the price cap set forth in paragraph 7 below. 3. Any Migration System shall select services from the Preferred Tier(s) to return to a CPST so that the cumulative number of migrated services remaining on any Preferred Tier(s) and any Superstation Tier is no greater than six. The subscriber's bill shall be adjusted by no more than 25 cents per such channel returned to the CPST. The services not returned to a CPST from the Preferred Tier(s) shall be offered as a single MPT, separate from any Superstation Tier. The initial price of any such MPT will be based on the Current Rate of the Preferred Tier(s), reduced by an amount equal to the percentage of channels shifted to a CPST. Eligible Subscribers shall be issued a CPST Refund as reflected in Appendix A. 4. On its own motion, the Cable Services Bureau, consistent with the terms set forth herein, hereby reconsiders any Letter of Inquiry ("LOI") rulings involving any Migration System (LOI-93-24; LOI-93-32; LOI-93-47; LOI-93-48), and TWE-A/N hereby petitions to withdraw its Applications for Review of such LOI rulings and such petitions are hereby granted by the Commission. The principles in this Section III.D. relating to the unregulated treatment, for benchmark calculation purposes, of up to six migrated channels, as incorporated in such reconsidered LOI rulings, shall be binding on any LFA decision relating to BST rates charged by any Migration System. r - 10 - 5. On each of its systems which does not, as of the Publication Date, offer a collective offering of a la cane channels created between April 1, 1993 and September 30, 1994, TWC may move a maximum of four existing BST or CPST services to a single MPT. TWC will set the initial rate for any new MPT created pursuant to this paragraph at the same level, on a per channel basis, that is set for that franchise's CPSTs under the Contract. 6. TWC may not require the subscription to any tier, other than the BST, as a condition for subscribing to an MPT, and may not require subscription to an MPT as a condition for subscribing to a CPST. Because the restructuring involved in the creation of MPT(s) as described herein does not fundamentally change the service provided to subscribers, TWC will not be required to re-market any of the affected services to existing subscribers. Any services migrated may be offered on an a la cane basis as well as in a package. 7. For the period prior to April 1, 1997, the price of any MPT established pursuant to this Section III.D. may be adjusted solely to reflect unrecovered inflation and external cost increases, including that currently accrued but uncharged, in the manner permitted by the Commission's rules for CPSTs. There will be no limitation on the number of new services TWC may add to an MPT. The price of any such MPT may be increased to reflect new services added to the MPT by an amount not to exceed $.20 per added channel, plus the actual license fee(s) for the added channel(s). 8. On or after April 1, 1997, TWC may convert any MPT into an NPT, as defined in 47 C.F.R. § 76.987, including subsequent clarifications or amendments. Because customers will be able to subscribe to CPST(s) and an MPT on a stand-alone basis, as of April 1, 1997 the Commission will regulate MPT rates in the same manner in which the Commission currently regulates NPT prices. Such NPTs will be treated as all other NPTs under the Commission's rules, provided such NPT is offered without a buy-through requirement of any tier other than the BST. E. Customer Refunds. Pursuant to the settlement of TWC's existing CPST rate cases as described in this section, TWC will provide Refunds, which in the aggregate total in excess of $4.7 Million, plus interest computed .in accordance with FCC requirements for subscriber refunds, on the terms and conditions, and in the manner, set forth below. 1. In settlement of all CPST complaints involving the review of an FCC Form 393 and/or FCC Form 1200 submitted by TWC which are pending as of the Publication Date, TWC will provide a Refund to each Eligible Subscriber as set forth in Appendix A to this Contract. 2. TWC agrees to waive its right to a credit for the franchise fee paid to the LFA on the CPST Refund amount. F. Infrastructure Upgrade Requirement. 1. Upgrade Requirement. TWC will upgrade all its cable systems, at a cost of $4 Billion, so as to meet the following technical standards: each TWC cable system with a present capacity of at least 550 MHz will have a bandwidth capacity of at least 750 MHz within five years after the Effective Date; all other TWC cable systems will have a bandwidth capacity of at least 550 MHz within five years after the Effective Date. At least 50% of all TWC subscribers will be served'by a system with a capacity of at least 750 MHz, of which at least 200 MHz is expected to be allocated to digital distribution. Fiber-to-the-node architecture will be deployed to improve signal quality and reliability of such systems. At least 60% of the new - 12 - analog services added during the term of the Contract will be added to the CPST and not to BST, NPT or MPT. On average (weighted by CPST subscribers), CPST service offered on the upgraded systems will contain at least 15 additional channels by the end of the Contract. TWC has selected, and will select, its systems to be upgraded without discrimination based on socio-economic status. 2. No Impairment Of Local Authority. Nothing herein shall restrict the legal authority of LFAs to negotiate upgrades for their particular franchise areas which exceed the scope of this Contract. 3. Reporting Requirements. No later than 90 days following the end of each calendar year during all of which the Contract is in effect, and within 90 days following the end of the last month following expiration of this Contract other than calendar year end, TWC will provide a progress report to the FCC, for the year or such shorter period then ended during which this Contract was in effect, setting forth the extent of progress TWC has made to upgrade systems in compliance with Section III.F.L; the number of BST and CPST subscribers benefitting from such upgrades; system reliability and service improvements resulting from such upgrades completed during the previous calendar year; and TWC's projected system upgrade activities during the following year of the Contract. Such report will be served on each LFA. The FCC reserves the right to inspect the books and records of TWC and interview corporate employees for the purpose of determining compliance with this Contract. - 13 - 4. CPST Rates Subject To Price Can. Beginning January 1, 1996, TWC will be permitted to increase the monthly rates for the most highly penetrated CPST on each of its systems by $1.00 during each year of this Contract. During the life of this Contract, the only other permitted increases to CPST rates will be for inflation and increases in external costs. In particular, during the term of this Contract, TWC will not avail itself of any additional per-channel adjustment permitted by the Going Forward Rules for any programming services added to the CPST after the Effective Date hereof. Nothing herein shall affect the ability of TWC to implement any New Product Tier ("NPT"), add channels to any such NPT, or establish rates for any such NPT, subject to the FCC Going Forward Rules, or to implement any MPT permitted by the terms of this Contract. 5. Failure To Meet Target. If TWC fails to meet the upgrade requirement so as to provide the bandwidth capacities described in Section III.F.1. of this Contract within the term provided for therein, the then existing CPST subscribers to the cable systems as to which such commitment has not been met will be entitled to refunds (in the form of prospective bill credits) of the increases (net of inflation and external cost adjustments) in CPST rates taken under this Contract, plus interest computed in accordance with FCC requirements for subscriber refunds, and a liquidated damages penalty of 15% of such refund amount. 6. Adjustments To Systems Subject To Contract. a. TWC may,.at its option, include any cable systems acquired from CVI within the provisions of this Contract, provided that the CPST settlement provisions of this Contract shall not apply until any applicable settlements are mutually - 14 - agreed upon between TWC and the Commission. Addition of any other TWC systems within the provisions of this Contract shall be subject to FCC approval, which will be expeditiously decided and not be unreasonably withheld. The provisions of this Contract will extend as to any such additional system for a period of five years from the date such system is added within the provisions of this Contract. b. In the event of a sale of any system during the period of applicability of this Contract, the purchaser may elect, with the concurrence of the FCC, for the provisions-of this Contract to continue to apply to such system. Such FCC concurrence shall be expeditiously decided and not be unreasonably withheld. In the event the purchaser elects not to have the provisions of this Contract apply to any such system, the CPST subscribers to such system shall be eligible for the refunds calculated pursuant to Section III.F.5. in the event the upgrade commitment described in Section III.F.1. has not been completed prior to the consummation of such sale. G. BST And CPST Rate Stability. 1. In the event the FCC establishes regulations allowing annual adjustments to BST and CPST rates, with procedures designed to reduce regulatory lag, TWC agrees to be bound by such regulations and to elect to adjust BST and CPST rates on an annual basis pursuant to such regulations, provided, however, TWC shall not be delayed in implementing its annual adjustments to CPST rates as set forth in Section III.F.4. due to regulatory lag related to the BST rate approval process. 2. TWC will not elect to file cost-of-service showings to justify BST or CPST rate levels above the level authorized by this Contract for any system subject to this Contract for the term hereof. - 15 - H. Additional Consumer Benefits. 1. Service To Public Schools. a. TWC shall offer service connections at one outlet in 100% of the public schools (Grades K-12) passed by its cable systems. Such connections will be made free of charge and as promptly as possible to all such schools requesting connections. If any internal wiring installation is requested to serve additional outlets in such schools, it will be provided at TWC's Cost of materials and labor at the applicable Hourly Service Charge; provided, however, that such internal wiring will be provided without charge if TWC is able to coordinate with other comparable electrical wiring installation in cases of new construction or substantial rehabilitation of existing schools. BST and CPST service will be provided to each outlet in such schools free of any charges. b. TWC shall offer service connections, including any requested internal wiring for additional outlets, at Cost to any private Secondary School, as defined by, and which receives funding pursuant to, Title 1 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965, 20 U.S.C. § 241a et seq., and which is passed by its cable systems. BST and CPST service will be provided to each outlet in such schools free of any charges. C. TWC will provide a free monthly educational program listing to each connected school. Additional copies of such program listings will be provided, if requested by a school, at Cost. Such educational program listing will identify and describe programming on the TWC system that is appropriate for use in the classroom and will provide suggested curriculum support ideas. d. TWC will develop and provide to connected schools materials for teachers that explain the educational applications of TWC's broadband cable systems. - 16 - The materials will include a self-explanatory notebook and video. One copy of such materials will be provided at no charge to all school districts with connected schools in franchise areas served by TWC. Additional copies of such materials will be provided, upon request, at Cost. e. Upon successful development by TWC and Time Inc. of an on- line service for personal computers, TWC will provide each connected school with a free connection to this on-line service to the extent it is available on the local TWC cable system. Upon request,. each connected school will receive one free modem and free access to the TWC/Time Inc. on-line service for use during the school year. Additional modems will be made available, upon request, at Cost. Free access to the TWC/Time Inc. on-line service will be provided through each such modem for use during the school year. In addition, TWC will sponsor a workshop in each franchise area to educate teachers about the TWC/Time Inc. on-line service and to provide them with an opportunity for hands-on training. f. To the extent a local franchise agreement contains an obligation to provide the connections to schools as agreed to herein, TWC agrees not to seek to recover any such costs for these connections as external or other costs. 2. Home Wiring. a. Prior to a customer's termination of cable service, TWC will not restrict the ability of a customer to remove, replace, rearrange or maintain any cable wiring located within the interior space pf the customer's dwelling unit, so long as such actions do not interfere with the ability of such TWC system to meet FCC technical - 17 - standards or to provide services to, and collect associated revenues from, that customer or any neighboring customer in a multiple dwelling context. b. TWC will provide customers with a notification upon commencement of service, and annually thereafter, advising them of their rights relating to home wiring. Such notice will advise customers that they may either (i) remove, replace, rearrange or maintain the home wiring themselves, (ii) select a qualified third party contractor, or (iii) request the TWC system provide such service at standard hourly installation rates, plus materials at Cost. C. Such notice will inform customers that if any home wiring is improperly installed or rearranged by anyone other than TWC, and any harmful or improper signal leakage occurs as a result, the customer may be held responsible for the Cost of rectifying the problem. Pursuant to FCC rules, TWC recognizes that it is required to terminate service to any location where signal leakage problems are not corrected. d. TWC customers will be encouraged to use high quality home wiring materials to avoid signal leakage and to maintain signal quality. Such notice will offer to supply such materials to subscribers at Cost. e. TWC will provide a model of this notice to the FCC for approval prior to its dissemination to its customers, such approval not to be unreasonably withheld. I. Miscellaneous Provisions. 1. Modification And Termination. a. Except as otherwise provided herein, this Contract may not be terminated or modified without the mutual agreement of TWC and the Commission. - 18 - b. TWC may petition the Commission to modify or terminate this Contract based on any relevant change in applicable laws, regulations or circumstances. TWC will serve a copy of any such modification or termination petition, and the FCC Public Notice relating thereto, on the LFAs for the affected systems. In no event shall TWC be required to make more than one mailing to each LFA for any given modification or termination request. Interested persons will have 30 days after the FCC releases an appropriate Public Notice to comment and 15 days for reply comments before the FCC acts on any such TWC petition. The FCC's consent to any such termination or modification petition shall be demonstrated by an order issued by the FCC's Cable Services Bureau or at the FCC's option by the Commission itself. The FCC shall act expeditiously on such petition and grant of the petition shall not be unreasonably withheld. C. In the event of any changes to the provisions of the Act or any material changes to the FCC rules thereunder relating to rates (BST, CPST or equipment) that are favorable to TWC, any TWC system may elect to be relieved from the relevant rate provisions (Sections III.A.2., III.A.3., III.B., III.D., and III.F.4.) of this Contract accordingly, but shall remain bound by all other provisions of this Contract. In the event any such system elects to be relieved from such contract provisions in favor of such favorable regulatory provisions such system will only be allowed to recover any incremental amount that results under such favorable regulatory provisions in excess of any amount already recovered pursuant to Section III.F.4. of this Contract. Nothing herein shall restrict the ability of any TWC system to adjust.CPST rates in the event CPST rates are not regulated based upon changes to the Act or FCC regulations. - 19 - d. The Commission expressly recognizes that TWC has relied on the current federal law and FCC regulations governing cable television programming and rates in entering into this Contract, and that the Contract represents an accommodation between the FCC and TWC that generates substantial public interest benefits. Consequently, the Commission agrees not to find any CPST or equipment rate adjustments implemented in accordance with this Contract to be "unreasonable" under any subsequently-modified FCC regulations or under any subsequently-modified applicable statute, to the extent the Commission has discretion under such statute in determining whether any such rate adjustments are unreasonable. 2. Authority To Enforce Contract. a. Nothing in this Contract shall restrict the ability of LFAs to enforce the provisions of otherwise valid local franchise agreements and ordinances that are not the subject of or affected by the terms of this Contract. It is not the intent of either the FCC or TWC that this Contract create any judicially enforceable rights in any other parties. This Contract shall be enforceable against TWC by the FCC exclusively and no other party may seek to enforce this Contract as a third party beneficiary or otherwise, except that subscribers to TWC systems which increase their CPST rates will still have the right to file complaints with the FCC to the extent permitted under applicable FCC rules. b. For purposes of the Commission's authority to enforce any provision-of this Contract against TWC, including enforcement actions brought in U.S. District Court, TWC agrees that any breach of this Contract by TWC shall be considered the equivalent of a violation of an order of the FCC, entitling the Commission to exercise any rights and remedies attendant to the enforcement of a Commission order. However, aside f - 20 - from this limited purpose, TWC and the FCC agree that a breach of this Contract by TWC is not to be considered by any other party as the equivalent of a violation of an otherwise-valid FCC regulation or FCC order. In particular, any failure to comply with this Contract shall not be a basis for any denial of a franchise renewal by, or other enforcement action of, any LFA. 3. All Necessary Waivers And Preemptions Deemed Granted. a. In addition to the specific waivers of the Commission's rules identified in the Contract, the Commission order adopting this Contract shall affirmatively state that any and all waivers of the Commission's rules, and any and all modifications to Commission forms, necessary to effectuate the terms of this Contract are deemed to be granted thereby. The Commission finds that the concurrent exercise.of non-federal regulatory authority over the subject matter of this Contract is an impermissible interference with the FCC's regulatory authority and with its ability to accomplish its objectives in entering into this Contract. Accordingly, the Commission hereby expressly preempts any state or local law, regulation, ordinance or franchise that is inconsistent or conflicts with this Contract. The Commission will not assert in any proceeding that TWC's compliance with the terms of the Contract violates any Commission rule or order and, in any proceeding before the Commission brought by a third party, a showing by TWC that it has complied with the terms of the Contract shall constitute a defense to any claim that TWC's actions in meeting the terms of the Contract constitute a violation of any applicable Commission rule or order. b. CPST rate increases referenced in Section III.F.4. of this Contract will not be subject to prior FCC approval pursuant to Section 76.960 of the FCC - 21 - rules or otherwise, even if an adverse decision has been issued by the FCC as to any TWC CPST rate in the year prior to the Publication Date. Subscribers to TWC systems which increase their CPST rates still have the right to file complaints with the FCC to the extent permitted under applicable FCC rules. 4. Effect On Other Proceedings. a. The Commission agrees that it will not institute, on its own motion, any proceedings against TWC based upon the information obtained during the consideration of the Contract. In addition, in the absence of additional facts, the Commission agrees that any allegations and other circumstances involved in consideration of this Contract or settlement of the pending rate cases will not be used against TWC with respect to any future proceedings at the Commission. Nor may they be used against TWC as evidence of any .refund liability due subscribers in any proceeding conducted by any LFA. b. This Contract is intended to resolve the CPST complaints being settled in accordance with Section III.C.; to provide certainty regarding the CPST rate adjustments determined to be reasonable in accordance with Section III.F.4., and to otherwise cover those matters expressly set forth herein. The Commission and TWC acknowledge the existence of various lawsuits to which they are both parties. The Commission and TWC agree that this Contract shall have no effect on any pending lawsuit to which TWC is a party or, subject to Section III.I.7., on any future challenges to the Commission's regulatory authority that TWC may elect to initiate, other than a challenge to the Commission's regulatory authority to.enter into and enforce this Contract. C. The Commission expressly recognizes that this Contract is of limited duration and scope, and may be modified or terminated before its term has ended as - 22 - provided for in Section 111.1.1. of this Contract. Accordingly, the Commission and TWC agree that this Contract does not moot any legal challenge or defense relating to any provision of the Act or to the Commission's regulatory authority that TWC has brought or may bring in the future, other than a challenge to the Commission's regulatory authority to enter into and enforce this Contract. The Commission will not seek to dismiss any such legal challenge on grounds that this Contract renders such challenge moot and will actively oppose any assertion in court that this Contract moots any such challenge. 5. No Admission Of Wrongdoing. This settlement is without a finding by the Commission of any wrongdoing by TWC or any of its systems, subsidiaries or affiliates. Neither this Contract nor any aspect of the settlement contained herein constitutes an admission by TWC of any violation of, or failure to conform to or comply with, any law, rule or policy applicable to TWC or any of its systems, subsidiaries or affiliates. 6. Contract In Public Interest. In consideration of the Commission entering into this Contract, and resolving and terminating pending CPST cases and complaints in accordance with the terms of this Contract, TWC hereby agrees to the terms, conditions and procedures contained in this Contract. TWC and the Commission each acknowledge that it believes this Contract, and the terms, conditions and procedures hereof, provide for and will facilitate a fair and expeditious resolution of the cases and complaints that are the subject hereof in a manner that serves the public interest. 7. Legal Challenges. - 23 - a. TWC waives any right it may have to any judicial review or appeal, or any other right to otherwise challenge or contest the validity of any order by the Commission adopting this Contract, or to use this Contract as evidence in any such proceeding. TWC agrees that the provisions of this Contract shall be incorporated by reference in the Commission's order formally approving this Contract. TWC and the Commission agree that they will each actively defend, before any forum, any Commission order adopting the provisions of this Contract against any appeal of or other legal challenge by any third party to any such order. TWC and the Commission each agree that they will reasonably cooperate with the other in any such defense of the Contract and any such order. b. If the Commission, or the United States on behalf of the Commission, brings an action in any United States District Court to enforce the terms of any Commission order adopting this Contract, TWC agrees, subject to the terms of the immediately preceding paragraph, that it will not contest the validity of such Commission order, or the Commission's authority to enter into the Contract. TWC reserves the right, in defense of such an enforcement action, to demonstrate that it has complied with the provisions of the Contract or to assert its own interpretation regarding any performance obligations imposed by the Contract which may be subject to dispute. 8. Effective Date And Term. a. The term of this Contract shall commence on the Effective Date and, subject to Section III.I.1. above regarding modification and termination and Section III.E.6. above regarding adjustments to systems covered, shall continue in effect for five (5) years. c - 24 - b. TWC and the Commission agree to execute this Contract as of the Effective Date promptly upon issuance by the Commission of an order approving this Contract. C. The Commission and TWC expressly acknowledge and agree that the effectiveness of this Contract is contingent upon resolution and termination of TWC's CPST proceedings; issuance by the Commission of an order approving the Contract, and TWC's compliance with the terms, conditions, and procedures set forth in the Contract. If this Contract is not approved by Commission order and accepted by TWC, or if the Contract is otherwise rendered invalid, in whole or in part, by final order of any court of competent jurisdiction, the Contract or such part may not be used in any fashion by the FCC in any legal proceeding. d. TWC may commence any necessary or appropriate actions to initiate the rate adjustment processes embodied in this Contract at any time after the Effective Date, provided, however, as to any system listed on Appendix A, TWC shall not implement any rate adjustment pursuant to Section III.F.4. of this Contract unless the Refund provided for in Section III.E. has been issued as to such system, or the issuance of such Refund begins simultaneously with such rate adjustment. All Refunds will be issued within six months of the first rate adjustment implemented pursuant to Section III.F.4. 9. Public Notice. The Commission will issue promptly a Public Notice in which the Commission proposes to adopt the Contract as a final.order, and shall provide interested parties with thirty (30) days to comment on the Contract and an additional fifteen (15) days in which to file reply comments. - 25 - 10. Force Majeure. TWC shall not be deemed in breach of its commitments under this Contract in the event of any delay or failure in performance by any TWC system from any cause beyond its reasonable control and without its fault or negligence, including, but not limited to, acts of God, acts of civil or military authority, government regulations, embargoes, epidemics, war, terrorist acts, riots, insurrections, fires, explosions, earthquakes, nuclear accidents, floods, strikes, power blackouts, unusually severe weather conditions, or inability to secure local permits after all diligent efforts by TWC to secure such permits. 11. Severability. If any provision, clause or part of this Contract is invalidated by order of any court having proper jurisdiction over the subject matter of this Contract, the remainder of this Contract shall not be affected thereby and shall remain in full force and effect; provided, however, that, if either party reasonably determines that such invalidation is material to this Contract, the parties shall negotiate in good faith to reconstitute the Contract in a form that .is, to the maximum extent possible, consistent with both the original intent of both parties in entering into this Contract and the rationale of such invalidation order. 12. Entire Understanding. This Contract and its appendices, as either or both may be amended in accordance with the terms herein, constitute the entire agreement between TWC and the Commission with respect to the subject matter of this Contract and supersede all prior agreements and understandings, whether oral or written, between TWC and the Commission with respect to the subject matter of this Contract. No representation, warranty, promise, f - 26 - inducement, or statement of intention has been made by TWC or the Commission which is not embodi6d in this Contract, and neither party shall be bound by, or be liable for, any alleged representation, warranty, promise, inducement, or statement of intention not embodied in this Contract or its appendices. - 27 - IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this Social Contract has been duly executed and delivered by or on behalf of the parties hereto as of the Effective Date as defined herein. TIME WARNER ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY, L.P. By: Name: Title: TWI CABLE INC. By: Name: Title: TIME WARNER ENTERTAINMENT- ADVANCE/NEWHOUSE PARTNERSHIP By: Time Warner Entertainment Company, L.P. Managing Partner By: Name: Title: FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION By: Name: Title: 28381.20 APPENDIX A QUID CONTN4T NTTY BES FL0007 Rockledge $5,171 FL0009 Indian Harbor Beach 22384 FL0013 Melbourne 14,362 FL0014 Melbourne 303,759 FL0015 Volusia County 12,505 FL0017 Palm Bay 89,135 FL0021 West Melbourne 23,198 FL0163 Cape Canaveral 1,557 FL0165 Melbourne 717 FL0181 Orlando 189770 FL0196 St Petersburg 633,508 FL0240 Brooksville 32,270 FL0252 Orlando 343,089 FL0290 Lakeland 6,200 FL0312 Brooksville 63,500 FL0314 Brooksville 81)217 FL0322 Sandford 14,787 FL0597 Brooksville 32107 FL0622 Belleview 7,763 MA0063 Salem 111)274 MA0097 Melrose 5,080 MA0101 Stoneham 322 MO0198 Kansas City 78,801 MS0080 Jackson 164,400 MS0128 Clinton 54,208 NC0015 Salisbury 222981 NC0016 Wilmington 106,115 NC0027 Shelby 203,516 NC0167 Wilmington - Southport 292732 NC0168 Morehead 392706 NC0193 Metrolina 411)358 NCO286 Albemarle 15,990 NC0405 Mecklenburg 1211,204 NC0408 Wilmington - Burgaw 8,719 t APPENDIX A cum COMMUNITY REEIM NC0720 Weddington 3,042 NE0032 Lincoln 233,263 NH0034 Nashua 60,935 NJO082 Bergen 129,719 NY0104 Upper Manhattan 599,837 NY0133 Binghamton 2197198 NY0234 Lower Manhattan 1803,360 NY0336 Colonie 4,219 NY0338 Albany 63-141 NY0346 Syracuse 300,822 NY0352 Troy 182,844 NY0414 Penfield 6,662 NY0415 Gates 51P089 NY0416 Greece 2131079 NY0769 Rochester 42,908 NY1062 Ogden 2,704 NY134031 1280, 1281, 1402 Brooklyn/Queens 1,2102552 OH0239 Columbus 32,330 OH0517 Westerville 33,727 OH0532 Columbus 13-703 PA0006 Reading 343,753 PA0011 Shillington 13,821 PA1775 Monroeville 25,324 SCO015 Florence 97,072 SCO017 Sumter 58,020 TX0029 Austin 111,633 TX0483 Wichita Falls 162033 TX1422 Leander 72533 VA0046 Reston 172421 VA0074 Williamsburg 233,940 WI0234 Green Bay 37,857 WI0323 Greenfield 41)903 WI0420 Hale's Corner 12823 WV0104 Charleston 5,762 --------------- $4,736,434 APPENDIX B REGIONAL EQUIPMENT AREAS Apoleton/Green Bay, WI Milwaukee, WI Bakersfield, CA Minneapolis, MN Birmingham, AL National Division - East Boston, MA National Division - West Eastern Pennsylvania Division Maine Division Florida Divisions New York Divisions Hawaii Division North Carolina Divisions Illinois/Indiana Division Ohio Divisions Indianapolis, IN Portland, OR Jackson/Monroe, MS San Diego, CA Kansas City, MO Shreveport, LA Lincoln, NE Texas Divisions Los Angeles, CA Western Pennsylvania Division Memphis, TN T 1 M E W A R N E R ^+ C A B L E FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Michael Luftman August 3, 1995 (203) 328-0613 low TIME WARNER AGREES WITH FCC TO RATE CUTS AND CAPS, REBATES, UPGRADES AND MAJOR NEW SUPPORT FOR LOCAL SCHOOLS Time Warner Cable has signed a proposed "social contract" with the Federal Communications Commission that will provide its customers and the cities where it operates with a wide range of benefits. These include lower basic rates, rate stability through price caps for basic cable and the cable programming satellite tier (CPST), more than $5 million in refunds, upgrade of all its cable systems and substantial support for .. public schools. The contract will also resolve all outstanding rate cases involving Time Warner Cable before the FCC. "We are very pleased to have been able to work so productively with the FCC to resolve these issues in a way that benefits our customers, local schools, the cities where we do business and our company," said Joseph J. Collins, chairman and CEO of Time Warner Cable. "Our customers can be assured of lower basic rates including a 'lifeline' basic tier that will remain affordable for many low and fixed income families. Many also will receive a refund. Public schools will benefit from substantial support ensuring them .. (more) Tune Warner Cable 300 First Stamford Place Stamford CT 06902-6732 Tel 203.328.0600 Fax 203.328.0690 a• A Division of Time Warner Entertainment Company,L.P. i Page 2 access to the latest telecommunications technology. Communities will benefit from our commitment to upgrade our networks with the latest fiber optic technology, assuring the most reliable service possible! The major components of the social contract are: *" Time Warner Cable will reduce the price of basic cable by an additional 10%, beyond the 17% rollbacks of the past two years with an offsetting increase on CPST. This price reduction will create a lifeline basic service that will remain even more affordable for low and fixed income families. The price of this service will be capped, with adjustments permitted only once a year for changes in external costs and inflation. The company will cap prices for the CPST, raising the monthly charge on a customer's bill by no more than $1.00 each year other than for changes in external costs and inflation. " The company will make refunds to all customers in systems where its rates were subject to refund liability. The refunds will be in the form of bill credits. *" Time Warner will, over the next five years, upgrade its operations with fiber optic technology at a cost of$4 billion. This will dramatically improve reliability, picture quality and channel capacity. *" All public schools in the company's service areas will be provided with free cable service and additional support including free schedules of educational programming as well as a free training video and brochures for teachers that will help them understand the latest advances in telecommunications technology and how they can be applied to education. (more) Page 3 Time Warner is developing a high-speed on-line service for personal computers law using cable's high-speed delivery system. When that service is launched in any of the company's cable systems, each school in the system will receive a free hookup, including a cable modem, and hands-on training for teachers on the use of the service. In addition, the FCC and Time Warner said they expect the agreement will reduce the administrative burden and cost of regulation for local governments, the FCC and the company. .. a News media Information 2021418-0500 PC. WRecorded listing of release and texts 202 418-2222 Federal Communications Commission 1919 - M Street, N.W. Washington, D. C. 20554 TK6 rat qnnoun Or w1an. N of 1he lum Idit ofaGamn"Nalun coneGlutes ov clo actor. See MQ v.FCC 515 F 2d 21H(D.C.Circ 1974 August 3, 1995 COMMISSION AND TIME WARNER CABLE NEGOTIATE SOCIAL CONTRACT; �- COMMISSION REQUESTS PUBLIC COMMENT The Commission and Time Warner Cable (TWC) have negotiated a Social Contract (Contract)that will, if finally adopted by the Commission, provide for the upgrading of TWC's cable systems. The proposed Contract was negotiated in accordance with the Commission's authority to consider and adopt "social contrac;s" as alternatives to other regulatory approaches applicable to cable television rates. If adopted, the proposed Contract will assure fair and reasonable rates for TWC's customers, reduce the administrative burden and costs of regulation for local governments, the Commission and TWC, and resolve 946 cable programming services tier rate complaints on file with the Commission. The proposed Contract is designed to improve TWC's service by substantially upgrading the channel capacity and technical reliability of its United States cable systems. The Commission requests public comment. Comments on the proposed Contract are due by September 5, 1995. Reply comments are due by September 20, 1995. A Public Notice (FCC 95-336), entitled "Social Contract for Time Warner Cable Available for Comment" has been released today. Important elements of the proposed Contract include: • A commitment by TWC to upgrade its domestic cable systems at a cost of$4 billion over the next 5 years. • A TWC commitment to establish lifeline basic service tiers priced at 10% below TWC's benchmark regulated sates. TWC will be allowed to recoup reduced basic service tier revenue through price increases on its cable programming service tiers. • The total increase for all regulated programming services provided by TWC will be capped at $1 per year for each of the next five years, plus external -- costs and inflation. • An estimated $4.7 million plus interest in subscriber refunds, in the form of subscriber bill credits. w ...� r .e+ a� w.� v.. • TWC will provide free service connections at one outlet in 100% of the existing public schools (K-12) passed by its cable systems. Additionally, it will provide service connections at Bost in secondary private schools that receive funding under Title I of the Elementary anis Secondary Education Act of 1965. TWC will provide the connected schools with a monthly educational program guide having curriculum support ideas to assist educators in effectively using the new services. Any internal wiring needed by the connected schools for additional outlets will be provided by TWC at cost. 4- Upon successful development by TWC and Time Inc. of an on-line service for personal computers, TWC will, upon request, provide the cable connected schools (public or private) with one free modem, and additional modems will be made available to such schools at cost. As available in each service area, TWC will provide its on-line service free through each modem during the school year. • TWC subscribers will have the right to remove, replace, rearrange or maintain any cable wiring located in the interior space of their dwelling unit. In systems where TWC and its predecessors did not create a la carte packages, TWC can create migrated product tiers (MPTs) consisting of up to four services migrated from regulated tiers. The migrated .. channels will be priced at their rate regulated prices. • In the case of Newhouse systems acquired by TWC that had a la carte packages, TWC will be able to convert Newhouse's "Superstation" a la carte packages (typically three supetstations and one satellite channel) into NPTs, priced at current rates (which in no case exceed 29 cents per channel). Another MPT can be created on such systems consisting of satellite channels offered on other, low penetration; a la carte packages. These MPTs will be priced at their current per channel rates. The cumulative number of services migrated from the '.Superstation" and other a la carte packages cannot be greater than six. All remaining channels in Newhouse's a la carte packages will be returned to the traditionally rate-regulated service tiers. .. Where TWC created a la carte packages that received new product tier (NPT) treatment on systems that are contiguous with systems where MPTs will be created, TWC will have the option to lower the prices of the NPTs and raise the prices of the adjacent NPTs in a revenue neutral manner to TWC to provide uniform rates for the systems. The NPTs will then be subject to the price cap increases applicable to MPTs. • TWC may add an unlimited number of channels to an MPT at a price of 20 cents per channel plus license-fees. After April 1997, TWC may 2 i c j convert the MPTs to NPTs with n et constraine4 pricing, as permitted by the Commission'sgo' forward ruleb. • The resolution of pending rate cases;is without any' finding by the Commission of any wrongdoing by TWC. Cable Services Bureau Chief Meredith #. Jones commented, "This agreement with Time Warner Cable is another example of an innovative solution to regulatory and business issues of great complexity. The reaction to thei earlier Social.-Contract with Continental has low been highly positive. This Contract will provi4e TWC subscribers with upgraded, reliable service. It provides rate stability for TWC subscribers and re4olves nearly one thousand rate complaints. This Contract also extends free cable service to all public schools in TWC tow service areas. Permitting TWC subscribers to ftlocate intem4l cable wiring in their home is an innovative consumer friendly feature." •.. News Media contact: Morgan Broman at (202)1416-0852; Cable Services Bureau contacts: Nancy Markowitz, Jerome Powlkes and JoAnn'Lucanik at (242) 416-0800 r.. 3 ..r .. PUBLIC NOTICE FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION 1919 M STREET, N.W. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20554 News media information 202/418-0500 Recorded listing of releases and texts 202/632-0002. .. FCC 95-336 August 3, 1995 SOCIAL CONTRACT FOR TIME WARNER CABLE AVAILABLE FOR COMMENT THE COMMISSION SEEKS COMMENT ON A PROPOSED SOCIAL CONTRACT WITH TIME WARNER CABLE THAT PROVIDES INCREASED INVESTMENT IN CABLE TV INFRASTRUCTURE; ASSURES RATE STABILITY; PROVIDES FOR RESOLUTION OF RATE CASES; AND PROVIDES REFUNDS OF UP TO APPROXIMATELY $4.7 MILLION PLUS INTEREST TO AFFECTED SUBSCRIBERS Time Warner Cable (TWC) and the Federal Communications Commission have negotiated a proposed social contract (Contract). The proposed Contract was negotiated pursuant to the Commission's authority to regulate cable services under Title VI of the Communications Act and the Commission's February 22, 1994 decision that it would consider social contracts as an alternative form of regulation for cable operators. The proposed Contract will be considered for approval after evaluating public comment on this proposed agreement. This notice and the proposed Contract are being mailed to each person who has filed a rate complaint with respect to one of TWC's systems, and to all franchising authorities that have granted a cable franchise to TWC. This notice contains a summary description of the proposed Contract; the terms of the proposed Contract, however, will be controlling and interested persons should read the proposed Contract in its entirety. Copies of the proposed Contract can be obtained in the manner described below. The proposed Contract is designed to improve TWC's cable service by substantially upgrading the channel capacity and technical reliability of its United States cable systems. In addition, the proposed Contract will assure fair and reasonable rates for TWC's cable service customers and reduce the administrative burden and costs of regulation for local governments, the Commission, and TWC. •-- The five-year proposed Contract covers cable programming service tiers in all of TWC's cable franchises, including those that are currently unregulated because no complaint has been filed against the cable programming services tier. Thus, the Contract will provide rate stability and other benefits for TWC's customers regardless of th, it regulatory status. It also provides for the creation of a low-priced basic service tier. TWC serves approximately 9.7 million subscribers. Under the 1992 Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act, a basic service tier is the tier' of programming that contains at a minimum local broadcast stations. Cable programming services tiers are all other cable services, except those sold on a per channel or per program basis. •- Specifically, the proposed Contract provides for the investment of$4 billion to rebuild and upgrade all of TWC's domestic cable systems during the period from 1995 to 2000, including deployment of fiber optic technology, increased channel capacity and improved system reliability and signal quality. At least 60% of the new analog capacity added as a result of the upgrade will be used for regulated cable programming services tiers, and, on average, regulated cable programming services offered on the upgraded systems will contain at least 15 additional channels. The proposed Contract provides for the resolution and termination of TWC's pending cable programming services cases, including cable programming services cases against the systems TWC recently acquired from Houston Industries (KBLCOM) and Newhouse Broadcasting Corporation. To resolve these cases, TWC will make cash refunds in the form of bill credits to affected customers totalling approximately $4.7 million plus interest. Basic service tier benchmark cases currently pending before local franchising authorities would not be resolved by the proposed Contract. Those cases will continue to be resolved by TWC and the local franchising authorities pursuant to Commission rules. TWC will provide its subscribers with a low-cost basic service tier. To accomplish this, TWC will reduce its basic service tier rates on systems serving at least 85% of TWC's total subscribers to a level 10% below the current rates. TWC will be permitted to offset each of the 10% reductions by increasing the rate for its cable programming services tier. TWC also will restructure the basic service tier on any remaining systems so as to create a lifeline basic tier. TWC will not increase the programming on any basic service tier for the term of this Contract, except where required by applicable law or regulation or contract lawfully entered into pursuant to such •• law or regulation, or to provide additional local origination channels. However, local franchising authorities may elect not to have this low-cost service created within their franchise areas. •- In light of the upgrade commitment contained in the proposed Contract, TWC will be permitted to increase the monthly rates for the cable programming services tier by $1.00 during each year of the Contract. On each system, the increase will be added to the cable programming services tier having the greatest number of subscribers. During the life of the proposed Contract, the only other permitted increases to TWC's cable programming services tier rates will be for inflation and increases in external costs. During the period of the proposed Contract, TWC will not avail itself of any additional per-channel adjustment permitted by the Commission's Going Forward rules for any programming services added to the cable programming services tier after the effective date of the contract. TWC also will forego its right to use cost of service justifications to support 2 any future rate increases for any systems covered by the proposed Contract during the period that the proposed Contract is in effect. If TWC fails to meet the upgrade commitment within the term provided for under the Contract, subscribers to the cable systems that have not been upgraded will be entitled to appropriate refunds equal to the cable programming services rate increases provided by the Contract, with interest, plus a liquidated damages penalty of 15% of such amount. Under the proposal, in the systems where TWC and its predecessors did not create a la carte packages, TWC will be permitted to create migrated product tiers consisting of up to 4 services migrated from the regulated tiers. The migrated channels will be priced at the rate regulated price with increases allowed for inflation and external costs. There will be no limit on �- the number of channels that TWC may add to the migrated product tiers at the price of 20 cents per channel plus license fees. After April 1, 1997, TWC may convert any migrated product tier to a new product tier with market constrained pricing as permitted by the Going Forward rules. For the Newhouse systems acquired by TWC that had a la carte packages, TWC will be permitted to create migrated product tiers. Where the system had a "superstation" a la carte package (typically three superstitions and one satellite channel), the package will become a migrated product tier, initially priced at their current rates which are less than 29 cents per channel (exclusive of copyright fees). TWC will also be allowed to create another migrated product tier consisting of satellite channels located in other a la carte packages as long as the cumulative number of migrated services is no greater than six. These channels will be priced at the current per channel rate. (Newhouse's non-superstation a la carte packages were created from tiers that were affirmatively marketed and had traditionally low penetration rates of basic subscribers). TWC will be able to add an unlimited number of new channel offerings at the rate of 20 cents per channel plus license fees to these migrated product tiers. The remaining Newhouse channels from the a la carte packages will be put back in benchmark regulated cable programming services tiers. The rates for these tiers will increase due to the addition of these channels; however, the increases will be limited to not more than 25 cents per channel (including license fees). In systems where TWC has created a la carte packages which are being treated as new product tiers in areas contiguous with franchises where migrated product tiers will be created pursuant to the proposed Contract, TWC will be permitted to lower the prices of the new product tiers and raise the prices of the adjacent migrated product tiers in a revenue neutral manner to TWC to provide uniform rates in those systems. In those circumstances, the new product tiers will be subject to the price cap increases applicable to migrated product tiers. TWC will be permitted to establish prices for equipment and various installation functions based on averaged costs for all its systems on a geographic regional basis. 3 If the Commission adopts rules providing for annual adjustments to rates for basic service .. tiers and cable programming service tiers, TWC will comply with those rules and adjust its rates no more than annually. TWC will offer a cable connection to 100% of the public schools passed by its cable systems. Those connections will be provided free of charge to all such schools requesting connections. TWC also will provide a cable connection at cost to all secondary private schools that receive funding under Title I of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965. Further, if any internal wiring installation is needed at the connected schools, it will be provided at the TWC .. system's cost of materials and labor. Such additional internal wiring will be provided to public schools without charge if TWC is able to coordinate with other comparable electrical wiring installation in cases of new construction or substantial rehabilitation of existing schools. Basic •� service tier and cable programming services tier service will be provided to each outlet in connected schools at no charge. TWC will provide a free monthly educational program listing to each connected school. TWC also will develop and provide to connected schools materials for teachers that explain the educational applications of TWC's broadband cable systems. Finally, upon successful development by TWC and Time Inc. of an on-line service for Now personal computers, TWC will provide each connected public school with a free connection to this on-line service to the extent it is available on the local cable system. Upon request, each connecting school will receive one free modem and access to the service for use during the school year. TWC also has agreed to provide additional modems to the school at cost. TWC will sponsor a workshop in each franchise area to educate teachers and to provide them with an opportunity for hands-on training. Prior to a customer's termination of cable service, TWC systems will not restrict the ability of customers to remove, replace, rearrange or maintain any cable wiring located within the interior space of their dwelling units. TWC will provide customers with a notification upon commencement of service, and annually thereafter, advising them of their rights (i) to remove, replace, rearrange or maintain the home wiring themselves, (ii) to select a qualified third party contractor, and (iii) to request the TWC system provide such service at standard hourly installation rates, plus materials at cost. TWC systems will offer to supply such materials to subscribers at cost. Parties wishing to comment on the proposed Contract should do so by filing with the Secretary no later than September 5, 1995 an original and four copies of their comments. Replies •.. may be filed no later than September 20, 1995. All such pleadings should reference the file number noted above. The proposed contract is available for reference in the Cable Services Bureau's public reference room, Room 333 at 2033 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. Copies are available from the Commission's copy contractor, International Transcription Services, at Room 246, 1919 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20554, telephone number (202) 857-1433. The contract is also available via Internet at FCC.GOV. For further information, contact JoAnn Lucanik, Nancy Markowitz or Jerome Fowlkes at (202) 416-0800: 4 Media contact: Morgan Broman at (202) 416-0852. --FCC-- v a.r �.r �.r r.. 5 DRAFT SOCIAL CONTRACT FOR TIME WARNER CABLE TABLE OF CONTENTS Page I. BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 II. DEFINITIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 III. TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE SOCIAL CONTRACT . . . . . . . . . . . 3 A. Basic Service Tier Rate Relief . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 1. Creation of a Low-Cost, Lifeline Basic Service Tier . . . . . . . . . 3 2. BST Price Cap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3. Additions To Basic Service Tier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 r. B. Equipment Rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 C. Resolution Of Existing CPST Rate Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 D. Migrated Product Tiers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 E. Customer Refunds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 F. Infrastructure Upgrade Requirement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 1. Upgrade Requirement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 2. No Impairment Of Local Authority . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 3. Reporting Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 4. CPST Rates Subject To Price Cap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5. Failure To Meet Target . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 6. Adjustments To Systems Subject To Contract . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 G. BST And CPST Rate Stability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 H. Additional Consumer Benefits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 1. Service To Public Schools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 2. Home Wiring . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 lo. I. Miscellaneous Provisions . . . 17 1. Modification And Termination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 2. Authority To Enforce Contract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 3. All Necessary Waivers And Preemptions Deemed Granted . . . . . 19 4. Effect On Other Proceedings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 5. No Admission Of Wrongdoing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 6. Contract In Public Interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 7. Legal Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 8. Effective Date And Term . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 9. Public Notice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 10. Force Majeure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 11. Severability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 12. Entire Understanding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 SOCIAL CONTRACT FOR TIME WARNER CABLE •- 1. BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY. The' "Social Contract" set out in this document (the "Contract") relates to certain services and equipment offered by Time Warner Cable ("TWC") actually or potentially ,. subject to regulation under the terms of the applicable provisions of Title VI of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended ("Act"). The Federal Communications Commission ("FCC" or "Commission") finds that this Contract will advance the public interest by: (i) assuring fair and reasonable rates for TWC's cable service customers; (ii) facilitating the creation of a low-cost, lifeline basic service level; (iii) improving TWC's cable service by substantially upgrading the channel capacity and technical reliability of its cable systems; and (iv) reducing the administrative burden and cost of regulation for local governments, the FCC and TWC. The Contract has been negotiated between TWC and the FCC in accordance with the FCC's authority to consider and adopt "social contracts" as an alternative to other regulatory approaches applicable to cable television rates,''-' and its authority to regulate TWC's cable services under the Act, particularly in light of the Statement of Policy set forth in Section 2(b) of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Pub. L. No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460 ("1992 Cable Act"). Except as otherwise provided for herein, this Contract covers all of TWC's cable systems as of the Publication Date (as hereinafter defined). '-'Cost of Service Order, 9 FCC Rcd 4527, 11295-304 (1994); Public Notice, FCC 95-137 (April 3, 1995). - 2 - 11. DEFINITIONS. The following terms shall have the meanings set forth below. Certain other terms are two defined elsewhere herein. A. "Basic Service Tier" or "BST" means the cable service level which includes the signals of any local television broadcast stations and any public, educational or. governmental access channel required by the relevant franchise to be carried on the BST. B. "Cable Programming Service Tier" or "CPST" means any tier of video programming service, but shall not include (i) video programming carried on BST; (ii) video �- programming when offered on a per channel, multiplexed, a la carte or per program basis; (iii) any Migrated Product Tier; or (iv) any New Product Tier as defined by the Going Forward Rules. C. "Cost" means that the prices so designated have been designed to recover actual costs, including a reasonable rate of return as defined in the FCC Cost of Service Order, supra, at 1207. D. "Current Rates" means those TWC system rates that are in effect as of the Publication Date, or rates that will become effective after the Publication Date and for which notice was given to subscribers on or before the Publication Date. E. "CVI" means Cablevision Industries Inc., its subsidiaries and affiliates. F. "Effective Date" means the date on which the FCC releases an order approving this Contract. G. "Eligible Subscribers" means those CPST subscribers to any of TWC's cable systems listed on Appendix A to this Contract at the time Refunds are issued. - 3 - H. "Going Forward Rules" means the FCC's rules adopted in the Sixth Order on Reconsideration, 76 RR 2d 859 (1994), including all subsequent clarifications and amendments. •- I. "Migrated Product Tier" or "MPT" means (a) a tier consisting of up to four services moved from a system's existing BST or CPST(s) as described in Section III.D.S. or (b) any Superstation Tier or any tier consisting of those services remaining on a Preferred Tier, as defined in Section III.D.1., after any excess channels have been shifted to CPST as described in Section III.D.3. J. "Publication Date" means the date on which the Commission releases its initial Public Notice relating to this Contract. K. "Refund" means a prospective bill credit issued to Eligible Subscribers. L. "Time Warner Cable" or "TWC" means the collective reference to Time Warner Entertainment Company, L.P. ("TWE"), TWI Cable Inc. ("TWI Cable") and Time Warner Entertainment-Advance/Newhouse Partnership ("TWE-A/N"), or any subsidiary, division or affiliate thereof, or, where consistent with the context, any cable system owned or managed by TWE, TWI Cable or TWE-A/N, except where particular provisions of this Contract specify a more limited scope. III. TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THE SOCIAL CONTRACT. A. Basic Service Tier Rate Relief. 1. Creation of a Low-Cost, Lifeline Basic Service Tier. a. In order to provide its subscribers with the option to purchase a low-cost BST, no later than six months after the Effective Date, TWC will reduce its BST - 4 - rates on systems serving at least 85% of TWC's total subscribers to a level 10% below the Current RAtes. In any system where the BST rates are initially reduced by 10% as described above, but where BST rates are pending review on the Publication Date, TWC will reduce its BST rates further by 10% from the level ultimately determined to be reasonable, after such determination is no longer subject to review or appeal. TWC may increase its CPST rate(s) in any system by an amount necessary to recoup the reduction in revenues due to the 10% adjustment in the BST rate in that system. A local franchising authority ("LFA") may elect not to have TWC implement the BST rate reduction described in this paragraph in its franchise area by providing notice to TWC and the Commission no later than 45 days following the Effective Date. Such notice shall (a) be in writing, (b) be addressed to the Office of the Secretary, Federal Communications Commission, 1919 M Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20554, with a copy to Time Warner Cable, 300 First Stamford Place, Stamford, CT 06902-6732, attention: General Counsel, (c) identify the local franchising authority, the community unit identification number for the franchise area, and (d) reflect the clear intent to not have TWC implement the BST rate reduction described in Section III.A.La of this Contract. However, such notice need not meet any other requirements and may be in letter form. b. In order to achieve its goal of creating low-cost BSTs, TWC will restructure the BST on the remaining systems where the BST has not been reduced by 10% as described above so as to create a lifeline-type service. Such restructuring will involve shifting channels from the BST to an existing or newly created CPST and will not be deemed by the FCC to be a "fundamental change" of any affected service tier. At the time of such restructuring, the BST rate will be reduced by an amount equal to the percentage of 5 - the BST channels shifted to CPST. Where the BST channels are shifted to a newly created CPST, the/rate for the CPST will be equal to the amount of the reduction in the BST rate. Where the BST channels are shifted to an existing CPST, the rate of the existing CPST will be increased by an amount necessary to recoup the reduction in revenues resulting from the reduction in the BST rate as described above. The 10% BST rate reduction, with CPST offset, will be implemented upon restructuring of such remaining systems. Nothing herein shall be deemed to affect any otherwise enforceable franchise provision relating to programming services to be provided by TWC. 2. BST Price Cap. After implementation of the 10% BST rate reduction described above, all such reduced BST rates will be subject to a price cap, even in currently unregulated TWC systems. TWC will continue to be permitted to adjust BST rates for changes in external costs and inflation, subject to any necessary LFA approval. The BST rate reduction referred to above will have no adverse effect on any Form 1210 BST rate adjustment request which may be pending before an LFA as of the Publication Date or thereafter. Nothing herein shall authorize review of the reasonableness of any BST rate adjustments in communities where the LFA has not elected to certify in accordance with Section 76.910 of the Commission's rules. 3. Additions To Basic Service Tier. TWC shall not add any additional channels to any BST for the term of this Contract, except where required by applicable law, regulation or contract lawfully entered into pursuant to such law or regulation, or to provide additional local origination channels or other non-satellite delivered channels. In the event that the FCC's must-carry rules are - 6 - repealed or rendered invalid or inapplicable to TWC by a court of competent jurisdiction, TWC will have the right to substitute any programming service not then carried by such system for up to an average (weighted by BST subscribers) of three local television broadcast stations deleted from carriage per system covered by this Contract, but no more than five such substitutions on any given system, even if more than five television broadcast stations are deleted. Such substitutions shall have no impact on BST rates other than due to the net change in programming costs. In the absence of must-carry requirements, however, any local television broadcast stations which TWC continues to carry will be carried on the BST. Any such changes to BST will be made only upon provision of thirty days advance notice to the Commission and to affected LFAs and subscribers. Upon receipt of any necessary LFA approval, TWC will be permitted to implement appropriate BST rate adjustments to reflect any such added or substituted channels. Such adjustments (other than adjustments to BST required by any retransmission consent agreement) shall not be subject to the annual BST adjustment limitation set forth in Section III.G. B. Equipment Rates. TWC will be permitted to establish a blended rate, averaged for each of the following equipment basket categories: (1) hourly service charge, (2) installations, (3) remote control devices, (4) converters, (5) other leased equipment, and (6) customer tier changes by geographic region as reflected on Appendix B to this Contract (and any reasonable modifications to such regions). Equipment rates will be adjusted annually to reflect changes in regional equipment Costs in each category. At least thirty days prior to .r implementation of the first CPST adjustment authorized pursuant to Section III.F.4., but not sooner than December 1, 1995, TWC will submit a single Form 1205, or equivalent .. 7 - reasonably acceptable to the Commission, for each region to the FCC, and will submit annual updates to such filings thereafter for Commission review. Any data required to support such annual equipment rate adjustments may be based on the four most recent available quarterly financial figures. TWC may begin charging revised equipment and installation rates to customers based upon the updated filing upon thirty days' notice. These revised equipment and installation rates will be subject to refund if the Commission later concludes that lower region-wide rates are called for by such filings and applicable rules. Such region-wide equipment and installation charges as TWC establishes and the Commission approves pursuant to this Contract shall be subject to enforcement by local franchising authorities. Should any LFA find that TWC's equipment and installation rates charged exceed those permitted by the Commission, the LFA may order TWC to make refunds of any excess charges as necessary to comply with the equipment and installation charges permitted by the Commission. C. Resolution Of Existing CPST Rate Cases. 1. All CPST cases or complaints currently pending before the Commission are resolved pursuant to and as a result of the adoption of this Contract, as set forth in Appendix A to this Contract. 2. The Commission has reviewed TWC's pending CPST filings. In light r. of its review, the covenants and representations contained in this Contract, and in express reliance thereon, and in order to conserve Commission resources, avoid litigation costs, and achieve the other benefits to the public contained in this Contract, the Commission agrees to resolve all CPST cases and complaints involving TWC currently pending before it. - 8 - 3. In addition to those CPST rates which are subject to proceedings that are being fettled as set forth in Appendix A to this Contract, all other Current Rates, as adjusted for inflation and changes in external costs as of the Publication Date, charged by TWC for CPSTs are deemed reasonable under the Act and the Commission's rules. 4. BST rate disputes will continue to be resolved in the ordinary course, pursuant to applicable FCC rules. D. Migrated Product Tiers. 1. The Commission and TWC acknowledge (i) that certain TWE-A/N systems (the "Migration Systems") have been providing collective offerings of a la carte channels which were created between April 1, 1993 and September 30, 1994 and which consist of one or more (a) low-priced collective offerings, containing primarily superstations, at an average price of less than $0.29 per channel, excluding copyright fees (a "Superstation Tier"), and (b) low-penetrated collective offerings predominantly containing channels which had been affirmatively marketed as a separate tier before being offered on an a la carte basis (a "Preferred Tier") and (ii) that such offerings provided by such Migration Systems cumulatively contain in excess of six channels migrated from BST and/or CPST. 2. Any Superstation Tier offered by a Migration System shall be treated as a separate MPT. The initial price of such MPT will be based on the Current Rate of the Superstation Tier. Where neighboring TWC systems each offer an NPT or MPT consisting primarily of superstations and such NPT or. MPT would be priced differently under the Commission's regulations and this Contract, an adjustment may be made between or among such Current Rates on a revenue neutral basis so that a uniform rate for such NPTs/MPTs - 9 - may be established. In selecting services to be returned to a CPST in accordance with paragraph 3 below, the/Migration System serving Charlotte, North Carolina and surrounding areas may move services from a Superstation Tier in an effort to achieve a more uniform line-up among such adjacent NPT's and MPT's. All such uniformly priced NPTs/MPTs shall be subject to the price cap set forth in paragraph 7 below. 3. Any Migration System shall select services from the Preferred Tier(s) to return to a CPST so that the cumulative number of migrated services remaining on any Preferred Tier(s) and any Superstation Tier is no greater than six. The subscriber's bill shall be adjusted by no more than 25 cents per such channel returned to the CPST. The services not returned to a CPST from the Preferred Tier(s) shall be offered as a single MPT, separate from any Superstation Tier. The initial price of any such MPT will be based on the Current Rate of the Preferred Tier(s), reduced by an amount equal to the percentage of channels shifted to a CPST. Eligible Subscribers shall be issued a CPST Refund as reflected in Appendix A. 4. On its own motion, the Cable Services Bureau, consistent with the terms set forth herein, hereby reconsiders any Letter of Inquiry ("LOI") rulings involving any Migration System (LOI-93-24; LOI-93-32; LOI-93-47; LOI-93-48), and TWE-A/N .. hereby petitions to withdraw its Applications for Review of such LOI rulings and such petitions are hereby granted by the Commission. The principles in this Section IIID. relating to the unregulated treatment, for benchmark calculation purposes, of up to six migrated channels, as incorporated in such reconsidered LOI rulings, shall be binding on any LFA decision relating to BST rates charged by any Migration System. - 10 - 5. On each of its systems which does not, as of the Publication Date, offer a collective offering of a la carte channels created between April 1, 1993 and September 30, 1994, TWC may move a maximum of four existing BST or CPST services to a single MPT. TWC will set the initial rate for any new MPT created pursuant to this paragraph at the same level, on a per channel basis, that is set for that franchise's CPSTs under the Contract. 6. TWC may not require the subscription to any tier, other than the BST, as a condition for subscribing to an MPT, and may not require subscription to an MPT as a condition for subscribing to a CPST. Because the restructuring involved in the creation of MPT(s) as described herein does not fundamertally change the service provided to subscribers, TWC will not be required to re-market any of the affected services to existing subscribers. Any services migrated may be offered on an a la cane basis as well as in a package. 7. For the period prior to April 1, 1997, the price of any MPT established pursuant to this Section III.D. may be adjusted solely to reflect unrecovered inflation and external cost increases, including that currently accrued but uncharged, in the manner permitted by the Commission's rules for CPSTs. There will be no limitation on the number of new services TWC may add to an MPT. The price of any such MPT may be increased to reflect new services added to the MPT by an amount not to exceed $.20 per added channel, plus the actual license fee(s) for the added channel(s). 8. On or after April 1, 1997, TWC may convert any MPT into an NPT, as defined in 47 C.F.R. § 76.987, including subsequent clarifications or amendments. Because customers will be able to subscribe to CPST(s) and an MPT on a stand-alone basis, as of April 1, 1997 the Commission will regulate MPT rates in the same manner in which the Commission currently regulates NPT prices. Such NPTs will be treated as all other NPTs under the Commission's rules, provided such NPT is offered without a buy-through requirement of any tier other than the BST. E. Customer Refunds. Pursuant to the settlement of TWC's existing CPST rate cases as described in this section, TWC will provide Refunds, which in the aggregate total in excess of $4.7 Million, plus interest computed in accordance with FCC requirements for subscriber refunds, on the terms and conditions, and in the manner, set forth below. 1. In settlement of all CPST complaints involving the review of an FCC Form 393 and/or FCC Form 1200 submitted by TWC which are pending as of the Publication Date, TWC will provide a Refund to each Eligible Subscriber as set forth in Appendix A to this Contract. 2. TWC agrees to waive its right to a credit for the franchise fee paid to the LFA on the CPST Refund amount. F. Infrastructure Upgrade Requirement. 1. Upgrade Requirement. TWC will upgrade all its cable systems, at a cost of $4 Billion, so as to meet the following technical standards: each TWC cable system with a present capacity of at least 550 MHz will have a bandwidth capacity of at least 750 MHz within five years after the Effective Date; all other TWC cable systems will have a bandwidth capacity of at least 550 MHz within five years after the Effective Date. At least 50% of all TWC subscribers will •. be served by a system with a capacity of.at least 750 MHz, of which at least 200 MHz is expected to be allocated to digital distribution. Fiber-to-the-node architecture will be deployed to improve signal quality and reliability of such systems. At least 60% of the new - 12 - analog services added during the term of the Contract will be added to the CPST and not to BST, NPT or MPT. On average (weighted by CPST subscribers), CPST service offered on the upgraded systems will contain at least 15 additional channels by the end of the Contract. TWC has selected, and will select, its systems to be upgraded without discrimination based on socio-economic status. 2. No Impairment Of Local Authority. Nothing herein shall restrict the legal authority of LFAs to negotiate upgrades for their particular franchise areas which exceed the scope of this Contract. 3. Reporting Requirements. Now No later than 90 days following the end of each calendar year during all of which the Contract is in effect, and within 90 days following the end of the last month following expiration of this Contract other than calendar year end, TWC will provide a progress report to the FCC, for the year or such shorter period then ended during which this Contract was in effect, setting forth the extent of progress TWC has made to upgrade systems in compliance with Section III.F.1.; the number of BST and CPST subscribers benefitting from such upgrades; system reliability and service improvements resulting from such upgrades completed during the previous calendar year; and TWC's projected system upgrade activities during the following year of the Contract. Such report will be served on each LFA. The FCC reserves the right to inspect the books and records of TWC and interview corporate employees for the purpose of determining compliance with this Contract. - 13 - 4. CPST Rates Subject To Price Cap. Beginning January 1, 1996, TWC will be permitted to increase the monthly rates for the most highly penetrated CPST on each of its systems by $1.00 during each year of this Contract. During the life of this Contract, the only other permitted increases to CPST rates will be for inflation and increases in external costs. In particular, during the term of this Contract, TWC will not avail itself of any additional per-channel adjustment permitted by the Going Forward Rules for any programming services added to the CPST after the Effective Date hereof. Nothing herein shall affect the ability of TWC to implement any New Product Tier ("NPT"), add channels to any such NPT, or establish rates for any such NPT, subject to the FCC Going Forward Rules, or to implement any MPT permitted by the terms of this Contract. 5. Failure To Meet Target. If TWC fails to meet the upgrade requirement so as to provide the bandwidth capacities described in Section III.F.1. of this Contract within the term provided for therein, the then existing CPST subscribers to the cable systems as to which such commitment has not been met will be entitled to refunds (in the form of prospective bill credits) of the increases (net of inflation and external cost adjustments) in CPST rates taken under this Contract, plus interest computed in accordance with FCC requirements for subscriber refunds, and a liquidated damages penalty of 15% of such refund amount. 6. Adjustments To Systems Subject To Contract. a. TWC may,.at its option, include any cable systems acquired from CVI within the provisions of this Contract, provided that the CPST settlement provisions of this Contract shall not apply until any applicable settlements are mutually 14 - agreed 4 -agreed upon between TWC and the Commission. Addition of any other TWC systems within the provisions of this Contract shall be subject to FCC approval, which will be expeditiously decided and not be unreasonably withheld. The provisions of this Contract will extend as to any such additional system for a period of five years from the date such system is added within the provisions of this Contract. b. In the event of a sale of any system during the period of applicability of this Contract, the purchaser may elect, with the concurrence of the FCC, for the provisions of this Contract to continue to apply to such system. Such FCC concurrence shall be expeditiously decided and not be unreasonably withheld. In the event the purchaser elects not to have the provisions of this Contract apply to any such system, the CPST subscribers to such system shall be eligible for the refunds calculated pursuant to Section III.F.5. in the event the upgrade commitment described in Section III.F.1. has not been completed prior to the consummation of such sale. G. BST And CPST Rate Stability. 1. In the event the FCC establishes regulations allowing annual adjustments to BST and CPST rates, with procedures designed to reduce regulatory lag, TWC agrees to be bound by such regulations and to elect to adjust BST and CPST rates on an annual basis pursuant to such regulations, provided, however, TWC shall not be delayed in implementing its annual adjustments to CPST rates as set forth in Section III.F.4. due to regulatory lag related to the BST rate approval process. 2. TWC will not elect to file cost-of-service showings to justify BST or CPST rate levels above the level authorized by this Contract for any system subject to this Contract for the term hereof. - 15 - H. Additional Consumer Benefits. 1. Service To Public Schools. a. TWC shall offer service connections at one outlet in 100% of the public schools (Grades K-12) passed by its cable systems. Such connections will be made free of charge and as promptly as possible to all such schools requesting connections. If any internal wiring installation is requested to serve additional outlets in such schools, it will be provided at TWC's Cost of materials and labor at the applicable Hourly Service Charge; provided, however, that such internal wiring will be provided without charge if TWC is able to coordinate with other comparable electrical wiring installation in cases of new construction or substantial rehabilitation of existing schools. BST and CPST service will be provided to each outlet in such schools free of any charges. •.. b. TWC shall offer service connections, including any requested internal wiring for additional outlets, at Cost to any private Secondary School, as defined by, and which receives funding pursuant to, Title 1 of the Elementary and Secondary Education .. Act of 1965, 20 U.S.C. § 241a et seg., and which is passed by its cable systems. BST and CPST service will be provided to each outlet in such schools free of any charges. C. TWC will provide a free monthly educational program listing to each connected school. Additional copies of such program listings will be provided, if requested by a school, at Cost. Such educational program listing will identify and describe programming on the TWC system that is appropriate for use in the classroom and will ". provide suggested curriculum support ideas. d. TWC will develop and provide to connected schools materials for teachers that explain the educational applications of TWC's broadband cable systems. 16 - The materials will include a self-explanatory notebook and video. One copy of such materials will be provided at no charge to all school districts with connected schools in franchise areas served by TWC. Additional copies of such materials will be provided, upon request, at Cost. e. Upon successful development by TWC and Time Inc. of an on- line service for personal computers, TWC will provide each connected school with a free connection to this on-line service to the extent it is available on the local TWC cable system. Upon request, each connected school will receive one free modem and free access to the TWC/Time Inc. on-line service for use during the school year. Additional modems will be made available, upon request, at Cost. Free access to the TWC/Time Inc. on-line service will be provided through each such modem for use during the school year. In addition, .. TWC will sponsor a workshop in each franchise area to educate teachers about the TWC/Time Inc. on-line service and to provide them with an opportunity for hands-on training. f. To the extent a local franchise agreement contains an obligation to provide the connections to schools as agreed to herein, TWC agrees not to seek to recover any such costs for these connections as external or other costs. 2. Home Wiring. a. Prior to a customer's termination of cable service, TWC will not restrict the ability of a customer to remove, replace, rearrange or maintain any cable wiring located within the interior space of the customer's dwelling unit, so long as such actions do not interfere with the ability of sucti TWC system to meet FCC technical 17 - standards or to provide services to, and collect associated revenues from, that customer or any neighboring customer in a multiple dwelling context. b. TWC will provide customers with a notification upon commencement of service, and annually thereafter, advising them of their rights relating to home wiring. Such notice will advise customers that they may either (i) remove, replace, rearrange or maintain the home wiring themselves, (ii) select a qualified third party contractor, or (iii) request the TWC system provide such service at standard hourly installation rates, plus materials at Cost. �— C. Such notice will inform customers that if any home wiring is improperly installed or rearranged by anyone other than TWC, and any harmful or improper signal leakage occurs as a result, the customer may be held responsible for the Cost of rectifying the problem. Pursuant to FCC rules, TWC recognizes that it is required to terminate service to any location where signal leakage problems are not corrected. d. TWC customers will be encouraged to use high quality home wiring materials to avoid signal leakage and to maintain signal quality. Such notice will offer to supply such materials to subscribers at Cost. e. TWC will provide a model of this notice to the FCC for approval prior to its dissemination to its customers, such approval not to be unreasonably withheld. I. Miscellaneous Provisions. 1. Modification And Termination. a. Except as otherwise provided herein, this Contract may not be terminated or modified without the mutual agreement of TWC and the Commission. - 18 - b. TWC may petition the Commission to modify or terminate this Contract based on any relevant change in applicable laws, regulations or circumstances. TWC will serve a copy of any such modification or termination petition, and the FCC Public Notice relating thereto, on the LFAs for the affected systems. In no event shall TWC be required to make more than one mailing to each LFA for any given modification or termination request. Interested persons will have 30 days after the FCC releases an appropriate Public Notice to comment and 15 days for reply comments before the FCC acts on any such TWC petition. The FCC's consent to any such termination or modification petition shall be demonstrated by an order issued by the FCC's Cable Services Bureau or at the FCC's option by the Commission itself. The FCC shall act expeditiously on such petition and grant of the petition shall not be unreasonably withheld. C. In the event of any changes to the provisions of the Act or any material changes to the FCC rules thereunder relating to rates (BST, CPST or equipment) that are favorable to TWC, any TWC system may elect to be relieved from the relevant rate provisions (Sections III.A.2., III.A.3., III.B., III.D., and III.F.4.) of this Contract accordingly, but shall remain bound by all other provisions of this Contract. In the event any such system elects to be relieved from such contract provisions in favor of such favorable regulatory provisions such system will only be allowed to recover any incremental amount that results under such favorable regulatory provisions in excess of any amount already recovered pursuant to Section III.F.4. of this Contract. Nothing herein shall restrict the ability of any TWC system to adjust.CPST rates in the event CPST rates are not regulated based upon changes to the Act or FCC regulations. 19 - d. The Commission expressly recognizes that TWC has relied on the current federal law and FCC regulations governing cable television programming and �. rates in entering into this Contract, and that the Contract represents an accommodation between the FCC and TWC that generates substantial public interest benefits. Consequently, the Commission agrees not to find any CPST or equipment rate adjustments implemented in accordance with this Contract to be "unreasonable" under any subsequently-modified FCC regulations or under any subsequently-modified applicable statute, to the extent the Commission has discretion under such statute in determining whether any such rate adjustments are unreasonable. 2. Authority To Enforce Contract. a. Nothing in this Contract shall restrict the ability of LFAs to enforce the provisions of otherwise valid local franchise agreements and ordinances that are not the subject of or affected by the terms of this Contract. It is not the intent of either the FCC or TWC that this Contract create any judicially enforceable rights in any other parties. This Contract shall be enforceable against TWC by the FCC exclusively and no other party may seek to enforce this Contract as a third party beneficiary or otherwise, except that subscribers to TWC systems which increase their CPST rates will still have the right to file complaints with the FCC to the extent permitted under applicable FCC rules. b. For purposes of the Commission's authority to enforce any provision of this Contract against TWC, including enforcement actions brought in U.S. District Court, TWC agrees that any breach of this Contract by TWC shall be considered the equivalent of a violation of an order of the FCC, entitling the Commission to exercise any rights and remedies attendant to the enforcement of a Commission order. However, aside - 20 - from this limited purpose, TWC and the FCC agree that a breach of this Contract by TWC is not to be considered by any other party as the equivalent of a violation of an otherwise-valid FCC regulation or FCC order. In particular, any failure to comply with this Contract shall not be a basis for any denial of a franchise renewal by, or other enforcement action of, any LFA. 3. All Necessary Waivers And Preemptions Deemed Granted. a. In addition to the specific waivers of the Commission's rules identified in the Contract, the Commission order adopting this Contract shall affirmatively state that any and all waivers of the Commission's rules, and any and all modifications to Commission forms, necessary to effectuate the terms of this Contract are deemed to be granted thereby. The Commission finds that the concurrent exercise of non-federal regulatory authority over the subject matter of this Contract is an impermissible interference with the FCC's regulatory authority and with its ability to accomplish its objectives in entering into this Contract. Accordingly, the Commission hereby expressly preempts any state or local law, regulation, ordinance or franchise that is inconsistent or conflicts with this Contract. The Commission will not assert in any proceeding that TWC's compliance with the terms of the Contract violates any Commission rule or order and, in any proceeding before the Commission brought by a third party, a showing by TWC that it has complied with the terms of the Contract shall constitute a defense to any claim that TWC's actions in meeting the terms of the Contract constitute a violation of any applicable Commission rule or order. b. CPST rate increases referenced in Section III.F.4. of this Contract will not be subject to prior FCC approval pursuant to Section 76.960 of the FCC mw "0 - 21 - rules or otherwise, even if an adverse decision has been issued by the FCC as to any TWC CPST rate in the year prior to the Publication Date. Subscribers to TWC systems which increase their CPST rates still have the right to file complaints with the FCC to the extent permitted under applicable FCC rules. 4. Effect On Other Proceedings. .e a. The Commission agrees that it will not institute, on its own motion, any proceedings against TWC based upon the information obtained during the consideration of the Contract. In addition, in the absence of additional facts, the Commission agrees that any allegations and other circumstances involved in consideration of this Contract or settlement of the pending rate cases will not be used against TWC with respect to any future proceedings at the Commission. Nor may they be used against TWC as evidence of any refund liability due subscribers in any proceeding conducted by any LFA. b. This Contract is intended to resolve the CPST complaints being settled in accordance with Section III.C.; to provide certainty regarding the CPST rate adjustments determined to be reasonable in accordance with Section III.F.4., and to otherwise cover those matters expressly set forth herein. The Commission and TWC acknowledge the existence of various lawsuits to which they are both parties. The ... Commission and TWC agree that this Contract shall have no effect on any pending lawsuit to which TWC is a party or, subject to Section 111.1.7., on any future challenges to the Commission's regulatory authority that TWC may elect to initiate, other than a challenge to the Commission's regulatory authority to_enter into and enforce this Contract. C. The Commission expressly recognizes that this Contract is of limited duration and scope, and may be modified or terminated before its term has ended as .. �,.. w - 22 - provided for in Section I11.1.1. of this Contract. Accordingly, the Commission and TWC agree that this Contract does not moot any legal challenge or defense relating to any provision of the Act or to the Commission's regulatory authority that TWC has brought or may bring in the future, other than a challenge to the Commission's regulatory authority to enter into and enforce this Contract. The Commission will not seek to dismiss any such legal challenge on grounds that this Contract renders such challenge moot and will actively oppose any assertion in court that this Contract moots any such challenge. 5. No Admission Of Wrongdoing. This settlement is without a finding by the Commission of any wrongdoing by TWC or any of its systems, subsidiaries or affiliates. Neither this Contract nor any aspect of the settlement contained herein constitutes an admission by TWC of any violation of, or failure to conform to or comply with, any law, rule or policy applicable to TWC or any of its systems, subsidiaries or affiliates. 6. Contract In Public Interest. In consideration of the Commission entering into this Contract, and resolving and terminating pending CPST cases and complaints in accordance with the terms of this Contract, TWC hereby agrees to the terms, conditions and procedures contained in this Contract. TWC and the Commission each acknowledge that it believes this Contract, and the terms, conditions and procedures hereof, provide for and will facilitate a fair and expeditious resolution of the cases and complaints that are the subject hereof in a manner that serves the public interest. 7. Legal Challenges. - 23 - a. TWC waives any right it may have to any judicial review or appeal, or any other right to otherwise challenge or contest the validity of any order by the Commission adopting this Contract, or to use this Contract as evidence in any such proceeding. TWC agrees that the provisions of this Contract shall be incorporated by reference in the Commission's order formally approving this Contract. TWC and the Commission agree that they will each actively defend, before any forum, any Commission order adopting the provisions of this Contract against any appeal of or other legal challenge by any third party to any such order. TWC and the Commission each agree that they will reasonably cooperate with the other in any such defense of the Contract and any such order. b. If the Commission, or the United States on behalf of the Commission, brings an action in any United States District Court to enforce the terms of any Commission order adopting this Contract, TWC agrees, subject to the terms of the immediately preceding paragraph, that it will not contest the validity of such Commission order, or the Commission's authority to enter into the Contract. TWC reserves the right, in •.. defense of such an enforcement action, to demonstrate that it has complied with the provisions of the Contract or to assert its own interpretation regarding any performance obligations imposed by the Contract which may be subject to dispute. 8. Effective Date And Term. a. The term of this Contract shall commence on the Effective Date and, subject to Section 111.1.1. above regarding modification and termination and Section III.E.6. above regarding adjustments to systems covered, shall continue in effect for five (5) years. - 24 - b. TWC and the Commission agree to execute this Contract as of v the Effective Date promptly upon issuance by the Commission of an order approving this Contract. C. The Commission and TWC expressly acknowledge and agree V that the effectiveness of this Contract is contingent upon resolution and termination of TWC's CPST proceedings; issuance by the Commission of an order approving the Contract, and TWC's compliance with the terms, conditions, and procedures set forth in the Contract. If this Contract is not approved by Commission order and accepted by TWC, or if the Contract is otherwise rendered invalid, in whole or in part, by final order of any court of competent jurisdiction, the Contract or such part may not be used in any fashion by the FCC in any legal proceeding. d. TWC may commence any necessary or appropriate actions to initiate the rate adjustment processes embodied in this Contract at any time after the Effective Date, provided, however, as to any system listed on Appendix A, TWC shall not implement •. any rate adjustment pursuant to Section III.F.4. of this Contract unless the Refund provided for in Section III.E. has been issued as to such system, or the issuance of such Refund begins simultaneously with such rate adjustment. All Refunds will be issued within six months of the first rate adjustment implemented pursuant to Section III.F.4. 9. Public Notice. The Commission will issue promptly a Public Notice in which the Commission proposes to adopt the Contract as a final-order, and shall provide interested parties with thirty (30) days to comment on the Contract and an additional fifteen (15) days in which to file reply comments. - 25 - 10. Force Majeure. TWC shall not be deemed in breach of its commitments under this Contract in r. the event of any delay or failure in performance by any TWC system from any cause beyond its reasonable control and without its fault or negligence, including, but not limited to, acts of God, acts of civil or military authority, government regulations, embargoes, epidemics, war, terrorist acts, riots, insurrections, fires, explosions, earthquakes, nuclear accidents, floods, strikes, power blackouts, unusually severe weather conditions, or inability to secure local permits after all diligent efforts by TWC to secure such permits. 11. Severability. If any provision, clause or part of this Contract is invalidated by order of any court having proper jurisdiction over the subject matter of this Contract, the remainder of this Contract shall not be affected thereby and shall remain in full force and effect; provided, however, that, if either party reasonably determines that such invalidation is material to this Contract, the parties shall negotiate in good faith to reconstitute the Contract in a form that is, to the maximum extent possible, consistent with both the original intent of both parties in entering into this Contract and the rationale of such invalidation order. 12. Entire Understandine. This Contract and its appendices, as either or both may be amended in accordance with the terms herein, constitute the entire agreement between TWC and the Commission with respect to the subject matter of this Contract and supersede all prior agreements and understandings, whether oral or written, between TWC and the Commission with respect to the subject matter of this Contract. No representation, warranty, promise, - 26 - inducement, or statement of intention has been made by TWC or the Commission which is not embodi6d in this Contract, and neither party shall be bound by, or be liable for, any alleged representation, warranty, promise, inducement, or statement of intention not �,, embodied in this Contract or its appendices. - 27 - IN WITNESS WHEREOF, this Social Contract has been duly executed and delivered by or on behalf of the parties hereto as of the Effective Date as defined herein. TIME WARNER ENTERTAINMENT COMPANY, L.P. By: Name: Title: TWI CABLE INC. By: Name: Title: TIME WARNER ENTERTAINMENT- ADVANCE/NEWHOUSE PARTNERSHIP By: Time Warner Entertainment Company, L.P. Managing Partner By: Name: Title: -- FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION -- By: Name: Title: 28381.20 r r. APPENDIX A CID CO M=Y REFUND FL0007 Rockledge $5,171 FL0009 Indian Harbor Beach 2,384 FL0013 Melbourne 14,362 ww FL0014 Melbourne 301759 FL0015 Volusia County 12,505 FL0017 Palm Bay 89,135 FL0021 West Melbourne 2,198 FL0163 Cape Canaveral 1,557 FL0165 Melbourne 717 FL0181 Orlando 18,770 FL0196 St Petersburg 63$ 08 FL0240 Brooksville 3,270 FL0252 Orlando 34,089 FL0290 Lakeland 6,200 FL0312 Brooksville 6,500 FL0314 Brooksville 8,217 FL0322 Sandford 14,787 FL0597 Brooksville 31,107 FL0622 Belleview 7,763 MA0063 Salem 11,274 MA0097 Melrose 5,080 MA0101 Stoneham 322 MO0198 Kansas City 78,801 MS0080 Jackson 164,400 MS0128 Clinton 54,208 NC0015 Salisbury 22,981 NC0016 Wilmington 106,115 NC0027 Shelby 20,516 NC0167 Wilmington - Southport 29,732 NC0168 Morehead 39,706 NC0193 Metrolina 41$358 NCO286 Albemarle 15,990 NC0405 Mecklenburg 121,204 NC0408 Wilmington - Burgaw 8,719 APPENDIX A CUIID CO UVRMTY REQ NC0720 Weddington 3,042 NE0032 Lincoln 2331263 NH0034 Nashua 603,935 NT0082 Bergen 129,719 NY0104 Upper Manhattan 599,837 NY0133 Binghamton 219,198 NY0234 Lower Manhattan 180,360 NY0336 Colonie 4,219 NY0338 Albany 6,141 NY0346 Syracuse 3001822 ` NY0352 Troy 182,844 NY0414 Penfield 6,662 ., NY0415 Gates 5,089 NY0416 Greece 212079 NY0769 Rochester 423,908 4 NY1062 Ogden 2,704 NY1340, 1280, 1281, 1402 Brooklyn/Queens 1,2102552 -- OH0239 Columbus 32,330 OH0517 Westerville 3,727 OH0532 Columbus 1,703 PA0006 Reading 343,753 PA0011 Shillington 12821 PA1775 Monroeville 25,324 SCO015 Florence 97,072 SCO017 Sumter 58,020 TX0029 Austin 111,633 TX0483 Wichita Falls 16,033 TX1422 Leander 7,533 VA0046 Reston 173,421 VA0074 Williamsburg 23,940 W10234 Green Bay 37,857 WI0323 Greenfield 41903 WI0420 Hale's Corner 1,823 WV0104 Charleston 5,762 --------------- $4,736,434 APPENDIX B REGIONAL EQUIPMENT AREAS Appleton/Green Bay, WI Milwaukee, WI Bakersfield, CA Minneapolis, MN Birmingham, AL National Division - East Boston, MA National Division - West Eastern Pennsylvania Division Maine Division Florida Divisions New York Divisions Hawaii Division North Carolina Divisions Illinois/Indiana Division Ohio Divisions Indianapolis, IN Portland, OR Jackson/Monroe, MS San Diego, CA Kansas City, MO Shreveport, LA Lincoln, NE Texas Divisions Los Angeles, CA Western Pennsylvania Division Memphis, TN v •r rr