On Mon, Feb 06, 2023 at 06:57:27AM -0500, Fletcher Kittredge wrote:
> A big issue you don't mention is the easement, the legal right to place
> conduit. What does it mean to buy conduit if you don't have an easement on
> the property to use the conduit?
Typically, in large telecom installs like this (esp. for joint trench builds), 
the lead company obtains an Easement Agreement which allows "other 
telecommunications providers", "licensees" or "other designated agents" of the 
lead company to access and use the full enjoyment of the easement areas.  If 
you dig up registry of deeds for some large telecom joint trench builds (I can 
think of at least two examples), you'll find that these come pretty standard.

Further, conduit lease and license agreements of these sort for the buyer 
typically include Underlying Rights clause that also requires the trench system 
owner (the seller) to maintain underlying rights for the purchaser of rights to 
the conduit.  Seller is required to ensure that the buyer has proper legal 
rights to enter and make full enjoyment of the conduit capacity it purchased or 
otherwise licensed from the seller.

For constructions occuring outside of private property, the lead company is 
responsible for engaging local authorities owning the public right-of-way to 
propose the system installation in a multi-tenancy nature (i.e. the system 
meets and exceeds Dig Once and joint trench requirements set out by the 
municipality and so forth); as such, the right-of-way siting permits are 
developed to allow construction of the entire system and with the understanding 
of access by all users, in principle and procedures as provided under 
respective state laws.


James

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