ACE TELEPHONE ASSOCIATION; Hometown Solutions; Hutchinson Telecommunications, Inc.; Mainstreet Communications, LLC; Northstar Access, LLC; Otter Tail Telecom, LLC; Paul Bunyan Rural Telephone Company; Tekstar Communications, Inc.; US Link, Inc., Appellees, v. Leroy KOPPENDRAYER, in his official capacity as Chairman of the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission; R. Marshall Johnson, in his official capacity as a member of the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission; Kenneth Nickolai, in his official capacity as a member of the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission; Phyllis Reha, in her official capacity as a member of the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission; Gregory Scott, in his official capacity as a member of the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission; The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission, Appellants, Qwest Corporation, Intervenor Defendant/Appellant.
Nos. 05-1170, 05-1171.
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Submitted: Sept. 12, 2005. Filed: Dec. 29, 2005.
430 F.3d 876
John M. Devaney, argued, Washington, D.C. (Roy W. Hoffinger and Jason D. Topp, on the brief), for intervenor/appellant.
Counsel who presented argument on behalf of the appellee was Michael John Bradley of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Also appearing on the brief were Dan Lipshultz and Michael J. Bradley.
Before ARNOLD, HANSEN, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (MPUC) and Qwest Communications,
I.
The phone companies that filed the motion, Ace Telephone Association, Hometown Solutions, Hutchinson Telecommunications, Inc., Mainstreet Communications, LLC, Northstar Access, LLC, Otter Tail Telecom, LLC, Paul Bunyan Rural Telephone Company, Tekstar Communications, Inc., and U.S. Link, Inc., are so-called competitive local exchange carriers (CLECs), i.e., they compete to provide local telephone service. We will refer to the phone companies that brought this court action as the CLEC Coalition.
The Coalition‘s members compete in the Minnesota local telecommunications market against Qwest, and thus Qwest customers and CLEC customers often call one another. When this occurs, federal law allows the telephone company of the person called to collect from the caller‘s telephone company the additional costs, if any, that it incurred in sending the call to its final destination, referred to as “terminating the call.” See
The CLEC Coalition‘s motion for judicial review and declaratory relief is a creature of
II.
One of the purposes of the Act is to foster competition in local telephone markets. It offers so-called incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs), i.e., in general, dominant providers of local telephone service in a particular region, see
In a previous proceeding brought by AT & T and WorldCom (both CLECs though not plaintiffs here), the MPUC set out to determine the rates at which Qwest should lease certain network elements to CLECs. One such element was end-office switching. An end-office switch routes telephone calls to their final destination. Previously, Qwest had charged competitors $1.08 per month for each telephone line connected to a switch, as well as $0.00181 for each minute that they used the switch. While Qwest argued in favor of continuing this pricing structure, the CLEC Coalition and others contended that the per-minute part of the charge was outdated and that the MPUC should price end-office switching at a fixed, per-line rate only.
After hearing testimony in the network-element proceeding, the MPUC‘s administrative law judge concluded that the most reasonable method for leasing end-office switching was on a fixed, per-line basis. The ALJ concluded that Qwest‘s cost model was out-of-date and not adequately supported by the evidence in the record. The ALJ also noted that allowing Qwest to charge a usage-sensitive fee while competitors charged customers a fixed rate for their telephone service would stifle competition. The MPUC adopted the ALJ‘s report and required Qwest to submit a compliance filing listing the charge for the end-office switch at a fixed, monthly, per-line rate with no per-minute usage charges.
In its compliance filing, Qwest priced end-office switching at a fixed rate of $3.12 per line per month, with no per-minute usage charge. In that same filing, Qwest also set its RCR at zero. (The previous RCR had been $0.00181 per minute, the same rate that Qwest had charged competitors when leasing them an end-office switch). The regulations promulgated pursuant to the Act require that, except in limited circumstances, the ILEC and all CLECs in the state pay one another the same rate for terminating each other‘s calls (RCR).
After complaints from the CLEC Coalition, the MPUC opened a separate proceeding to investigate the proper RCR. After the issue had been briefed and argued, the MPUC decided to approve Qwest‘s zero RCR. In doing so, the MPUC cited the Act, which states that the RCR
III.
The Coalition argues, and the district court held, that the MPUC‘s decision to order a zero RCR was arbitrary and capricious. With respect to reviewing the MPUC‘s factual determinations, we believe that the arbitrary-and-capricious standard is the same as the substantial-evidence standard. See GTE South, Inc. v. Morrison, 199 F.3d 733, 745 & 745 n. 5 (4th Cir. 1999); cf. Association of Data Processing v. Fed. Reserve Sys., 745 F.2d 677, 683 (D.C. Cir. 1984). As long as the MPUC‘s factual findings are supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole, we will uphold those findings and the reasonable inferences that the MPUC drew from them. See Michigan Bell Tel. Co. v. MCIMetro Access Transmission Servs., Inc., 323 F.3d 348, 354 (6th Cir. 2003).
We conclude that the district court erred in holding that the MPUC‘s decision was arbitrary and capricious. Under federal law, the MPUC was to base the RCR on “a reasonable approximation of the additional costs” of termination.
In the network-element proceeding, the ALJ recognized that usage-based costs were theoretically possible, but determined that no party had actually demonstrated that usage-based costs in fact existed or, if they did, how much they were. In that proceeding, the MPUC accepted the ALJ‘s reasoning, and it determined that all the costs of the end-office switch were arguably recovered through the fixed-rate price. The MPUC thus had reason to believe in the RCR proceeding that the costs of modern end-office switching did not vary significantly with usage. Multiple parties in the earlier proceeding had introduced evidence consistent with that supposition. On this record, the MPUC reasonably concluded that the additional costs for terminating a telephone call were approximately zero.
The MPUC was entitled to look to the previous network-element proceeding when deciding the appropriate RCR. We know of no rule that limits a regulatory agency to considering evidence within a particular record in making a decision; instead, it may use findings made in one context to help decide a related matter in another. The CLEC coalition was a party to the previous proceeding. All the parties to the RCR proceeding recognized that the end-office switch issue and the reciprocal compensation issue were economically related inquiries. FCC regulations permitted the MPUC to use the same “forward-looking, economic cost-based pricing standard” for both proceedings. See Local Competition Order, 11 Fcc Rcd
We also conclude that the district court erred in holding that a zero RCR violated the plain language of the Act. The court relied on
IV.
We conclude, moreover, that the district court‘s order must be reversed for another, independently sufficient reason: Once the MPUC ordered Qwest to charge only a fixed per-line rate for end-office switching, federal law prevented the MPUC from imposing any non-zero RCR.
The Act, as the Supreme Court has noted, is often difficult to interpret. AT & T Corp. v. Iowa Utils. Bd., 525 U.S. 366, 397, 119 S.Ct. 721, 142 L.Ed.2d 835 (1999). This is true of the term “additional costs” as used in
Once the MPUC determined that there were no grounds for a per-minute usage-based charge on end-office switching and that there were public policy reasons to impose only a fixed-rate price, the die was cast. The CLEC Coalition asked for a fixed end-office switching lease rate, and the MPUC gave them one. The consequences of that decision may prove more costly than the Coalition expected, but we believe that that is what the law requires.
V.
For the reasons stated above, we reverse the district court‘s order granting the motion for judicial review and declaratory relief.
