No, I have never seen a wireless company have to get a franchise.  

From: Jeremy 
Sent: Tuesday, November 10, 2015 12:08 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Franchise Agreements with the city

I know that you've dealt with it Chuck, because you run fiber.  Have you ever 
heard of a wireless company being required to have a franchise?  Did you just 
bill it line item like a tax? ie. XYZ City Franchise Agreement Fee - 5% - $2.25 

They are consulting the city attorney and getting back with me.  If they 
determine that it is in fact required for wireless then I will obviously be 
seeking counsel before making any determination on which route to take.  I had 
just never heard such a thing.  The determinations made in the cases and 
appeals of Qwest vs. Oregon seem to point at it as purely an issue for cities 
to be able to control their public ROW.  It is hard for me to find any basis 
for requiring this fee for any other reason than that.  

On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 11:40 AM, Chuck McCown <[email protected]> wrote:

  I wouldn’t sweat it.  Generally the fees are 2-5% of revenue.  You tack it on 
the bill, blame the city, then raise holy hell with the city about other 
companies operating there without a franchise.  I have ran into this multiple 
times.  

  From: Jeremy 
  Sent: Tuesday, November 10, 2015 11:08 AM
  To: [email protected] 
  Subject: [AFMUG] Franchise Agreements with the city

  I found a law on the books that says any company selling telecommunication 
services within the city must have a franchise license with the city.  None of 
my competitors have ever done this.  I thought it must just be on the books 
from a time when all telecom was ran in the ROW, and therefore it would make 
sense.   

  Against my better judgement, I contacted the city about leasing space at a 
few of their properties.  Now, they want a franchise agreement for me to even 
offer service within the city at all.  I have not had a chance to view this 
agreement yet.  How does this make sense?  Is a franchise agreement a profit 
sharing type of scenario?  Does anyone have a franchise agreement with their 
city to provide wireless service?  What does the agreement usually entail?

  Would it make sense to just cease operations within city limits and then get 
all of the customers that want service to sign a petition?  Is this worth 
fighting them over?  You don't see McDonalds or WalMart signing franchise 
agreements with the city, why would any private entity have to have an 
agreement with the city to do business?  Is this standard practice?

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