Telecommunications Act 2001

Designated services and specified services - Determinations for designated access services and specified services - Application

21: When application must be treated as application for pricing review determination

You could also call this:

"When a price dispute is only about a discount, it's treated as a pricing review application."

Illustration for Telecommunications Act 2001

If you are an access seeker or an access provider of a designated access service, your application for a determination about the price you pay for the service is treated differently. You make this application because you want to know how much you should pay for the service. Your application must be treated as an application for a pricing review determination under section 42 if the only thing you are disagreeing about is the discount.

This text is automatically generated. It might be out of date or be missing some parts. Find out more about how we do this.

This page was last updated on

View the original legislation for this page at https://legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1986/0120/latest/link.aspx?id=DLM125784.


Previous

20: Application, or

"Asking the Commission to make rules for a service"


Next

22: When application may not be made, or

"When you can't ask for a decision under the Telecommunications Act"

Part 2Designated services and specified services
Determinations for designated access services and specified services: Application

21When application must be treated as application for pricing review determination

  1. An application by an access seeker or an access provider of a designated access service for a determination that relates to the price payable by the access seeker for the service must be treated as an application for a pricing review determination under section 42 if the only term at issue is the discount specified in the applicable initial pricing principle.