(a) Each community antenna television company, as defined in § 16-1, shall provide each subscriber with a description of all premium and basic service offerings, a list of premium and basic service rates and all service-related charges, information on equipment operation, including the availability of addressable converters, traps or other devices or services which enable subscribers to voluntarily block transmission of specific programming to their homes or places of business, and a description of the company’s customers credit policies, including any finance charges or late payment charges, at the time of the initial subscription and at least annually thereafter.

Terms Used In Connecticut General Statutes 16-333l

  • Authority: means the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority and "department" means the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection. See Connecticut General Statutes 16-1
  • Community antenna television company: includes every person owning, leasing, maintaining, operating, managing or controlling a community antenna television system, in, under or over any public street or highway, for the purpose of providing community antenna television service for hire and shall include any municipality which owns or operates one or more plants for the manufacture or distribution of electricity pursuant to §. See Connecticut General Statutes 16-1
  • Community antenna television service: means (A) the one-way transmission to subscribers of video programming or information that a community antenna television company makes available to all subscribers generally, and subscriber interaction, if any, which is required for the selection of such video programming or information, and (B) noncable communications service. See Connecticut General Statutes 16-1
  • Community antenna television system: means a facility, consisting of a set of closed transmission paths and associated signal generation, reception and control equipment that is designed to provide community antenna television service which includes video programming and which is provided in, under or over any public street or highway, for hire, to multiple subscribers within a franchise, but such term does not include (A) a facility that serves only to retransmit the television signals of one or more television broadcast stations. See Connecticut General Statutes 16-1
  • Complaint: A written statement by the plaintiff stating the wrongs allegedly committed by the defendant.
  • Consumer: means any private dwelling, boardinghouse, apartment, store, office building, institution, mechanical or manufacturing establishment or other place of business or industry to which water is supplied by a water company. See Connecticut General Statutes 16-1
  • Person: means an individual, business, firm, corporation, association, joint stock association, trust, partnership or limited liability company. See Connecticut General Statutes 16-1

(b) Each such company shall provide each subscriber with a description of the company’s billing practices at the time of the initial subscription and at least annually thereafter. Such description shall include billing period and frequency, security deposit requirements, late payment charges, returned check charges, credits for service outages, pay-per-view billing procedures, charges and billing procedures for the use of addressable converters, traps or other devices or services which enable subscribers to voluntarily block transmission of specific programming to their homes or places of business and such other items as the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority may require. Each company shall file a copy of its billing practices with the authority and shall give notice to the authority and each subscriber not less than forty-five days prior to implementing any changes in such practices. Every bill to subscribers of a community antenna television service shall contain (1) the date on which any individually chargeable service is rendered, (2) each rate or charge levied, (3) the amount due for the current billing period separate from any prior balance due, (4) the specific date by which payment is due, (5) such other items as the authority may require, (6) the company’s telephone numbers, including any toll-free numbers, (7) the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority’s consumer assistance telephone number, and (8) the mailing address of the company’s advisory council. Each company shall provide each subscriber, quarterly, with a summary of the procedures for resolving subscriber complaints and for providing refund or credit for service interruptions, pursuant to § 16-333e, and a notice indicating that, pursuant to subsection (b) of § 16-333i, the company is required to restore interrupted service not later than twenty-four hours after being notified by a subscriber that service has been interrupted. Each bill insert or letter to subscribers, other than promotional material, shall contain the company’s telephone numbers, including any toll-free numbers or any other free calling option, as approved by the authority and the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority’s consumer assistance telephone number. Each advisory council, in conjunction with the company, shall notify subscribers of the time and place of any upcoming advisory council meeting, of any vacancies that may exist on the advisory council and of the name of the council chairperson and address of the advisory council. The notification may be provided via the community antenna television system at a sufficient frequency that subscribers may reasonably be expected to become aware of the meeting or by publishing on a quarterly basis the information in a newspaper having general circulation within each municipality in the franchise area.

(c) No community antenna television company shall issue a bill which contains a statement that payment is due upon receipt. The payment due date of any subscriber’s bill shall be no earlier than twenty-five days after the issue date of such bill. No community antenna television subscriber’s account shall be considered delinquent until at least twenty-five days have elapsed from the billing date contained in the subscriber’s bill. No community antenna television company may impose a late charge or terminate service on account of nonpayment of a delinquent account less than forty-five days from the original billing date. In order to terminate service, a company shall first give notice of such delinquency and impending termination at least fifteen days prior to the imposition of the proposed late charge or the termination, by first class mail addressed to the subscriber. The fifteen-day period shall commence from the date the notice is mailed, provided no notice may be mailed until at least thirty days have elapsed from the billing date contained in the subscriber’s bill. No such company may impose a late charge greater than eight per cent of the balance due or any such rate as determined by the authority. Any returned check charge imposed by such company shall be reasonably related to the company’s actual cost of processing returned checks.

(d) Any community antenna television subscriber shall have not less than forty-five days from the billing date contained in the subscriber’s bill in which to register a complaint with a community antenna television company with respect to any billing error or dispute. A billing complaint may be registered in person at the company’s business office, by telephone or by mail. The company shall promptly investigate the billing complaint, shall provide an initial response to the subscriber not later than three days after receipt thereof and shall provide a written proposal of the disposition of the complaint to the subscriber not later than fifteen business days following the company’s receipt of the complaint. The subscriber, after receiving the company’s proposed disposition of the complaint, shall have ten days to contest the disposition and may present the company with additional information concerning the complaint. In the event the subscriber contests the proposed disposition, the company shall review any additional information, if provided, and shall notify the subscriber of the company’s final disposition within fifteen days. No community antenna television company may effect termination of service to the subscriber for nonpayment of disputed bills during the pendency of any billing complaint, provided the subscriber shall pay current and undisputed bill amounts during the pendency of the complaint. The Public Utilities Regulatory Authority, upon the written request of the subscriber, may review the company’s disposition of a billing complaint in accordance with such procedures as the authority shall prescribe and make such orders as the authority deems reasonable and necessary to finally resolve the complaint.

(e) The Public Utilities Regulatory Authority shall adopt regulations, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54, to administer the provisions of this section.