You're over-thinking it. Use the power company as a model and you'll close to the right path. On Tue, Jul 22, 2014 at 4:05 PM, Eric Brunner-Williams <brunner@nic-naa.net> wrote:
On 7/22/14 11:13 AM, Ray Soucy wrote:
Municipal FTTH needs to be a regulated public utility (ideally at a state or regional level). It should have an open access policy at published rates and be forbidden from offering lit service on the fiber (conflict of interest).
Ray,
Could you offer a case for state (or regional, including a jurisdictional definition) preemption of local regulation?
Counties in Maine don't have charters, and, like most states in the North East, their powers do not extend to incorporated municipalities. Here in Oregon there are general law counties, and chartered counties, and in the former, county ordinances to not apply, unless by agreement, with incorporated municipalities, in the later, the affect of county ordinances is not specified, though Art. VI, sec. 10 could be read as creating applicability, where there is a "county concern". In agricultural regions (the South, the Mid-West, the West), country government powers are significantly greater than in the North East, and as in the case of Oregon, nuanced by the exceptions of charter vs non-charter, inferior jurisdictions. Yet another big issue is Dillon's Rule or Home Rule -- in the former the inferior jurisdictions of the state only have express granted powers on specific issues, and in the latter the inferior jurisdictions of the state have significant powers "enshrined in the State(s) Constitution(s)".
I mention all this simply to show that one solution is not likely to fit all uses.
Now because I've worked on Tribal Bonding, I'm aware that the IRS allows municipalities to issue tax free bonds for purposes that are wider than the "government purposes" test the IRS has imposed on Tribal Bonding (up until last year). Stadiums, golf courses, and {filling a hole in | using pole space on} public rights-of-way -- forms of long-term revenue Tribes are barred from funding via tax free bonds by an IRS rule.
The (two, collided) points being, municipalities are likely sources of per-build-out funding, via their bonding authority, and you've offered a claim, shared by others, that municipalities should be preempted from per-build-out regulation of their infrastructure.
How should it work, money originates in the municipality of X, but regulation of the use of that money resides in another jurisdiction?
Eric
-- Ray Patrick Soucy Network Engineer University of Maine System T: 207-561-3526 F: 207-561-3531 MaineREN, Maine's Research and Education Network www.maineren.net