*TITLE 15.2. COUNTIES, CITIES AND TOWNS. CHAPTER 21. FRANCHISEES; SALE AND LEASE OF CERTAIN MUNICIPAL PULBIC PROPERTY; PUBLIC UTILITIES
§ 15.2-2108. Licensing, etc., and regulation of cable television systems.
A. The words “cable television system” as used in this section shall mean any facility consisting of a set of closed transmission paths and associated signal generation, reception and control equipment that is designed to provide cable service which includes video programming and which is provided to multiple subscribers within a community, except that such definition shall not include (i) a system that serves fewer than twenty subscribers, (ii) a facility that serves only to retransmit the television signals of one or more television broadcast stations, (iii) a facility that serves only subscribers in one or more multiple unit dwellings under common ownership, control, or management, unless such facility or facilities use any public right-of-way, (iv) a facility of a common carrier which is subject, in whole or in part, to the provisions of Title II of the Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. § 201 et seq., except that such facility shall be considered a cable system to the extent such facility is used in the transmission of video programming directly to subscribers, (v) any facilities of any electric utility used solely for operating its electric systems, or (vi) any portion of a system that serves fewer than fifty subscribers in any locality, where such portion is a part of a larger system franchised in an adjacent locality.
The words “cable service” as used in this section mean the one-way transmission to subscribers of (i) video programming, or (ii) other programming service, and subscriber interaction, if any, which is required for the selection of such video programming or other programming service.
B. A locality may grant a license or franchise, or issue a certificate of public convenience and necessity to no more than one cable television system, and impose a fee thereon. However, a governing body shall have the authority to award additional licenses, franchises or certificates of public convenience as it deems appropriate, if such governing body finds that the public welfare will be enhanced by such awards after a public hearing at which testimony is heard concerning the economic consideration, the impact on private property rights, the impact on public convenience, the public need and potential benefit, and such other factors as are relevant.
C. No such governing body shall grant any overlapping licenses, franchises or certificates of public convenience for cable service within its jurisdiction on terms or conditions more favorable or less burdensome than those in any existing license, franchise or certificate of public convenience within such locality. The prohibitions of the foregoing sentence shall not apply when the area in which the overlapping license, franchise or certificate of public convenience is being sought, is not actually being served by any existing cable service provider holding a license, franchise or certificate of public convenience for such area. As used in this subsection, the term “actually being served” means that cable service is actually available to subscribers to such extent that the only act remaining in order to provide cable service is the physical connection to the individual subscriber location as of fifteen days prior to any subsequent application for a franchise.
D. The governing body may regulate such systems, including the establishment of fees and rates, the assignment of channels for public use, the operation of such channels assigned for public use, and the placement of restrictions or conditions on the scope of the business activities engaged in by such systems with regard to the sale, lease, rental or repair of television receivers or repair of video cassette and disc recorders and players, or provide for such regulation and operation by such agents as the governing body may direct. The owner or operator of any cable television system shall not be required to pay the cost of interconnecting such cable television systems between localities.
E. The grant of authority by this section to localities to regulate cable television systems, including regulations that displace or limit competition by or among persons owning or operating such systems, has been and continues to be based on the policy of the Commonwealth to provide for the adequate, economical, and efficient delivery of such systems to the consuming public, to protect the public from excessive prices and unfair competition, and to prevent the owners and operators of such systems from obtaining an unfair competitive advantage by reason of the license, franchise or certificate of convenience over businesses that sell, lease, rent or repair television receivers or repair video cassette and disc recorders and players. No locality may regulate cable television systems by regulations inconsistent with either laws of the Commonwealth or federal law relating to cable television operations.
F. Localities may by ordinance exercise all the regulatory powers over cable television systems granted by the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992 (P.L. 102-385, 1992). These regulatory powers shall include the authority (i) to enforce customer service standards in accordance with the Act, (ii) to enforce more stringent standards as agreed upon by the cable television system operator through the terms of the franchise, and (iii) to regulate the rates for basic cable service in accordance with the Act.
G. To the extent that a franchised cable television operator has been authorized to use the public rights-of-way in a locality and is obligated to pay a franchise fee to such locality, such cable television operator shall not be subject to any occupancy, use, or similar fee, with respect to its use of such rights-of-way, by the locality or the Commonwealth Transportation Board. The Commonwealth Transportation Board may charge, on a nondiscriminatory basis, fees to recover the approximate actual cost incurred for the issuance of a permit to perform work within the rights-of-way and for inspections to ensure compliance with the conditions of the permit, as such fees shall be established by regulations adopted under the Administrative Process Act. A locality may charge, on a nondiscriminatory basis, fees to recover the approximate actual cost incurred for the issuance of a permit to perform work within the rights-of-way and for inspections to ensure compliance with the conditions of the permit, as such fees existed on February 1, 1997, or as subsequently modified by ordinance. The limitation as to fees charged for the use of the public rights-of-way shall not be applicable to pole attachments and conduit occupancy agreements between a franchise cable television operator and a locality or its authority or commission, which permits such operator to use the public poles or conduits.
*Note: This statutory text is given for illustrative purposes only. It may represent only that portion of the statute that FOIA mentions. There may have been legislative changes to the statute as well. Check the most recent, official version of the Virginia Code before relying on any provision seen here.