Oklahoma Code § 11-22-107.1

Title 11. Cities And Towns: Regulation of video services systems
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A.  A municipality may by ordinance or otherwise grant a
certificate, license, permit or franchise for the operation of a
video services system, unless such authority is already provided for
by law.  Any certificate, license, permit or franchise granted
pursuant to this section shall constitute a bargained contract
between the municipality and the video services provider and shall
provide for a consideration payment to the municipality as rental
for the privileges granted to the provider to use the public ways
and grounds within the municipality in furtherance of its video
services business.  The rental payment shall be set at the amount
bargained between the municipality and the video services provider
but shall not exceed five percent (5%) of the annual gross revenues
derived by the video services provider from the provision of video
services within the municipality.  Any certificate, license, permit
or franchise issued by the governing body shall be nonexclusive and
shall not exceed a period of twenty-five (25) years and may be
revocable by the governing body if the body determines that the
holder of the certificate, license, permit or franchise has
willfully failed or neglected to perform duties pursuant to the
terms of the grant of the certificate, license, permit or franchise.
Nothing herein shall limit the authority of a municipality to comply
with state or federal law.
B.  In the event a municipality grants an overlapping
certificate, license, permit or franchise for video services within
its jurisdiction on terms or conditions more favorable or less
burdensome than those in any existing certificate, license, permit
or franchise within the municipality the holder of the existing

certificate, license, permit or franchise shall be entitled, upon
written notice to the municipality, to adopt the terms in the
overlapping certificate, license, permit or franchise that are more
favorable or less burdensome than those in the existing certificate,
license, permit or franchise and the adopted terms shall become
enforceable by the municipality.
C.  In addition to any other authority granted to municipalities
by this section or other applicable law, a municipality may also
adopt an ordinance regulating a video services system pursuant to
its police power.  No municipal provisions regulating a video
services system may be adopted which are inconsistent with either
state or federal law or with the terms and conditions of the
certificate, license, permit or franchise bargained by the
municipality and the video services provider.
D.  In awarding or renewing a certificate, license, permit or
franchise for video services, a municipality may require adequate
assurance that the video services system provider will provide
adequate public, educational, and governmental access channel
capacity, facilities or financial support.  A video services system
provider may, at its sole option, provide a “family-friendly” tier
of video services in lieu of channel capacity, facilities, or
financial support for public access as a condition of any
certificate, license, permit or franchise for video services or
renewal thereof.  Nothing herein shall affect any channel capacity,
facilities, or financial support for educational or governmental
access contained in any certificate, license, permit or franchise
for video services or renewal thereof.
E.  A “family-friendly” tier of services is a group of channels,
offered to customers pursuant to Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) regulations, that primarily contains programming with a
television viewing rating of TV-Y, TV-Y7 or TV-G.
F.  “Video services” means video programming, including cable
services, provided through wireline facilities owned, controlled,
constructed, or operated by the provider of such video service and
located at least in part in the public rights-of-way without regard
to the delivery technology, including Internet protocol technology.
Video services shall not include:
1.  Video programming provided by a commercial mobile service
provider as defined in 47 U.S.C., Section 332(d)(1);
2.  Direct-to-home satellite services as defined in 47 U.S.C.,
Section 303(v) that are transmitted from a satellite directly to a
customer’s premises without using or accessing any portion of the
public right-of-way; or
3.  Video programing accessed via a service that enables users
to access content, information, electronic mail, messaging and other
services offered over the Internet, including streaming content.

Added by Laws 1985, c. 65, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 1985.  Amended by Laws
1988, c. 147, § 1, eff. Oct. 11, 1988; Laws 2006, c. 168, § 1, eff.
Nov. 1, 2006; Laws 2016, c. 47, § 1, emerg. eff. April 12, 2016;

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