Wisconsin Code § 196.04

Facilities granted other utilities; physical telecommunications connections; petition; investigation
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(1) (a) Definitions. In this section:
2. “Physical connection” means the number of trunk lines or
complete circuits and connections, including connections by
wire, optics, radio signal or other means, required to furnish reasonably adequate telecommunications service between telecommunications providers.
3. “Political subdivision” means any county, city, village, or
town or public utility owned or operated by any county, city, village, or town.
4. “Transmission equipment and property” means any conduit, subway, pole, tower, transmission wire, or other equipment
on, over, or under any right-of-way owned or controlled by a political subdivision, street, or highway.
(b) Transmission equipment and property access. 1. Any person who owns transmission equipment and property shall permit,
for reasonable compensation, the use of the transmission equipment and property, including an attachment to a pole, by any public utility, video service provider, or telecommunications provider
if public convenience and necessity require such use and if the
use will not result in irreparable injury to any owner or user of the
transmission equipment and property or in any substantial detriment to the service to be rendered by the owner or user.
2. Every telecommunications utility shall permit physical
connections to be made, and telecommunications service to be
furnished, between any telecommunications system operated by
it and the telecommunications toll line operated by another
telecommunications provider, or between its toll line and the

telecommunications system of another telecommunications
provider, or between its toll line and the toll line of another
telecommunications provider, or between its telecommunications
system and the telecommunications system of another telecommunications provider if all of the following apply:
a. Public convenience and necessity require the connection.
b. The connection will not result in irreparable injury to the
owners or other users of the facilities of the public utility making
the connection.
c. The connection will not result in any substantial detriment
to the service to be rendered by a public utility making the
connection.
(2) If there is a failure to agree upon the use of transmission
equipment and property under sub. (1) or the conditions or compensation for the use, or if there is a failure to agree upon the
physical connections or the terms and conditions upon which the
physical connections shall be made, any public utility, video service provider, telecommunications provider, or other interested
person may apply to the commission. If, after investigation, the
commission determines that public convenience and necessity require the use of the transmission equipment and property or the
physical connections and that the use or physical connections will
not result in irreparable injury to the owner or other users of the
transmission equipment and property or of the facilities of the
public utility, video service provider, or telecommunications
provider or in any substantial detriment to the service to be rendered by the owner or the public utility, video service provider,
telecommunications provider, or other users of the transmission
equipment and property or facilities, the commission, by order,
shall direct that the use of the transmission equipment and property be permitted and that the physical connections be made. The
commission shall prescribe reasonable conditions and compensation for the use of the transmission equipment and property and
shall determine how and within what time the physical connections shall be made and by whom the expense of making and
maintaining the physical connections shall be paid. An order under this subsection may be revised by the commission.
(4) (a) In this subsection, “sewerage system operator” means
any of the following:
1. A municipality that operates a sewerage system under s.
66.0821.
2. A town sanitary district commission that operates a sewerage system under s. 60.77 (4).
3. A city or village that obtains a sewerage system under s.
60.79.
4. A metropolitan sewerage district commission that operates a sewerage system under s. 200.11 (2) or 200.31 (1).
5. A public inland lake protection and rehabilitation district
that exercises the powers of a town sanitary district under s. 33.22
(3) and that operates a sewerage system under s. 60.77 (4).
(b) If the parties cannot agree and the commission finds that
public convenience and necessity or the rendition of reasonably
adequate service to the public requires that a public utility,
telecommunications provider, sewerage system operator, or video
service provider be permitted to extend its lines on, over or under
the right-of-way of any railroad, or requires that the tracks of any
railroad be extended on, over or under the right-of-way of any
public utility, telecommunications provider, sewerage system operator, or video service provider, the commission may order the
extension by the public utility, telecommunications provider,
sewerage system operator, video service provider, or railroad on,
over or under the right-of-way of the other if it will not materially
impair the ability of the railroad, telecommunications provider,
sewerage system operator, video service provider, or public utility, on, over or under whose right-of-way the extension would be
made, to serve the public. The commission shall prescribe lawful
conditions and compensation which the commission deems equitable and reasonable in light of all the circumstances.

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