Maryland Code § PS-1-313

Section PS-1-313
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) (1) In this section the following words have the meanings indicated.
(2) "Consumer" means a person that purchases prepaid wireless
telecommunications service in a retail transaction.
(3) "Provider" means a person that provides prepaid wireless
telecommunications service under a license issued by the Federal Communications
Commission.
(4) "Retail transaction" means the purchase of prepaid wireless
telecommunications service from a seller for any purpose other than resale.
(b) There is a prepaid wireless E 9-1-1 fee of 60 cents per retail transaction.
(c) (1) (i) The prepaid wireless E 9-1-1 fee shall be collected by the
seller from the consumer for each retail transaction in the State.
(ii) The prepaid wireless E 9-1-1 fee collected by the seller
under this section is not subject to the sales and use tax under the Tax - General
Article.
(2) A retail transaction occurs in the State if:
(i) the sale or recharge takes place at the seller's place of
business located in the State;
(ii) the consumer's shipping address is in the State; or

(iii) no item is shipped, but the consumer's billing address or
the location associated with the consumer's mobile telephone number is in the State.
(d) The amount of the prepaid wireless E 9-1-1 fee shall be disclosed to the
consumer at the time of the retail transaction.
(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection, the
prepaid wireless E 9-1-1 fee is the liability of the consumer and not of the seller or
of any provider.
(2) The seller is liable for remitting all prepaid wireless E 9-1-1 fees
that the seller collects from consumers as provided in this section.
(f) (1) Before December 28, 2013, a seller may deduct and retain 50% of
prepaid wireless E 9-1-1 fees collected from consumers for direct start-up costs.
(2) On or after December 28, 2013, a seller may deduct and retain 3%
of prepaid wireless E 9-1-1 fees collected from consumers.
(g) A seller shall report and remit to the Comptroller all prepaid wireless E
9-1-1 fees collected by the seller in the manner provided for the remitting of the sales
and use tax under Titles 11 and 13 of the Tax - General Article.
(h) The Comptroller shall deposit all reported and remitted prepaid wireless
E 9-1-1 fees into the 9-1-1 Trust Fund within 30 days of receipt.
(i) A seller may demonstrate that a sale is not a retail transaction in a
manner established by the Comptroller that is substantially similar to the procedures
for demonstrating a resale for exemption from the sales and use tax under Titles 11
and 13 of the Tax - General Article.
(j) For the purpose of this section, the audit and appeal procedures
established for the sales and use tax under Titles 11 and 13 of the Tax - General
Article apply.
(k) A seller that is not a provider of prepaid wireless telecommunications
service is not liable for damages in connection with:
(1) the provision of, or failure of, 9-1-1 or E 9-1-1 service;
(2) identifying, or failing to identify, the telephone number, address,
location, or name associated with any person or device that is accessing or attempting
to access 9-1-1 or E 9-1-1 service; or

(3) the provision of any lawful assistance to any investigative or law
enforcement officer.
(l) Providers and sellers of prepaid wireless telecommunications service
have the same immunity from liability for transmission failures as that approved by
the Public Service Commission for local exchange telephone companies that are
subject to regulation by the Commission under the Public Utilities Article.
(m) A tax, a fee, a surcharge, or any other charge may not be imposed by the
State, any political subdivision of the State, or any intergovernmental agency, for E
9-1-1 funding purposes, on any provider, seller, or consumer with respect to the sale,
purchase, use, or provision of prepaid wireless telecommunications service.
(n) The Comptroller shall adopt regulations to carry out the provisions of
this section.

‹ Prev All Maryland sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.