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China Mobile LimitedTable of Contents (Mark One) UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549 FORM 10-K X ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 FEE REQUIRED _ TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 NO FEE REQUIRED For the fiscal year ended December31, 2002 OR For the transition period from to Commission file number 000-28167 Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) Delaware (State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) 52-2126573 (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) 600 Telephone Avenue Anchorage, Alaska (Address of principal executive offices) 99503-6091 (Zip Code) (907)297-3000 (Registrant’s telephone number, including area code) Securities registered pursuant to Section12(b) of the Act: Title of each class None Name of each exchange on which registered Securities registered pursuant to Section12(g) of the Act: Title of each class Common Stock, Par Value $.01 per Share Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1)has filed all reports required to be filed by Section13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12months (or such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2)has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90days. Yes XNo _ Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of RegulationS-K ( 229.405 of this chapter) is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form10-K or any amendment to this Form10-K. X 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. The aggregate market value of the shares of all classes of voting stock of the registrant held by non-affiliates of the registrant on March3, 2003, was approximately $19,906,035 computed upon the basis of the closing sales price of the Common Stock on that date . For purposes of this computation, shares held by directors (and shares held by any entities in which they serve as officers) and officers of the registrant have been excluded. Such exclusion is not intended, nor shall it be deemed, to be an admission that such persons are affiliates of the registrant. Indicate by check mark if whether the registrant is an accelerated filer (as defined in Rule12b-2 of the Act.) Yes No X The aggregate market value of the shares of all classes of voting stock of the registrant held by non-affiliates of the registrant on June28, 2002, was approximately $47,843,279 computed upon the basis of the closing sales price of the Common Stock on that date . For purposes of this computation, shares held by directors (and shares held by any entities in which they serve as officers) and officers of the registrant have been excluded. Such exclusion is not intended, nor shall it be deemed, to be an admission that such persons are affiliates of the registrant. As of March3, 2003, there were outstanding 30,629,566 shares of Common Stock, $.01 par value, of the registrant. Documents Incorporated by Reference Portions of the proxy statement to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to Regulation14A for the registrant’s 2003 annual meeting of stockholders are incorporated by reference into Part III of this Form10-K. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. TABLE OF CONTENTS PART I Item1. Business Item2. Properties Item3. Legal Proceedings Item4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders PART II Item5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity and Related Stockholder Matters Item6. Selected Financial Data Item7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations Item7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk Item8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data Item9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure PART III Item10. Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant Item11. Executive Compensation Item12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management Item13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions PART IV Item14. Controls and Procedures Item15. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports on Form8-K SIGNATURES OFFICER’S CERTIFICATIONS UNDER SARBANES-OXLEY SECTION 302(a) INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS EXHIBIT 21.1 EXHIBIT 23.1 EXHIBIT 99.1 EXHIBIT 99.2 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2002 Market for the Registrant’s Common Equity and Related Stockholder Matters Selected Financial Data Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk Financial Statements and Supplementary Data Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure Business Properties Legal Proceedings Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders PART I Item1. Item2. Item3. Item4. PART II Item5. Item6. Item7. Item7A. Item8. Item9. PART III Item10. Item11. Item12. Item13. PART IV Item14. Item15. Item15. SIGNATURE S OFFICER’S CERTIFICATIONS UNDER SARBANES-OXLEY SECTION 302(a) Index to Consolidated Financial Statements Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant Executive Compensation Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management Certain Relationships and Related Transactions Controls and Procedures Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports on Form8-K 50 Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports on Form8-K 50 Page 2 24 24 24 25 26 29 45 46 46 47 49 49 49 50 54 F-1 1 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS PART I Item1. Business Item2. Properties Item3. Legal Proceedings Item4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders PART II Item5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity and Related Stockholder Matters Item6. Selected Financial Data Item7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations Item7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk Item8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data Item9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure PART III Item10. Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant Item11. Executive Compensation Item12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management Item13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions PART IV Item14. Controls and Procedures Item15. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports on Form8-K SIGNATURES OFFICER’S CERTIFICATIONS UNDER SARBANES-OXLEY SECTION 302(a) INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS EXHIBIT 21.1 EXHIBIT 23.1 EXHIBIT 99.1 EXHIBIT 99.2 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents PART I Item1. Business Forward Looking Statements and Analysts’ Reports This Form10-K and future filings by Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. (“ACS Group” or the “Company”) on Forms 10-K, 10-Q and 8-K and future oral and written statements by the Company and its management may include certain “forward-looking statements” as defined under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including (without limitation) statements with respect to anticipated future operating and financial performance, financial position and liquidity, growth opportunities and growth rates, pricing plans, acquisition and divestitive opportunities, business prospects, strategic alternatives, business strategies, regulatory and competitive outlook, investment and expenditure plans, financing needs and availability, and other similar forecasts and statements of expectation. Words such as “aims,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “could,” “estimates,” “expects,” “hopes,” “intends,” “may,” “plans,” “projects,” “seeks,” “should,” and “will,” and variations of these words and similar expressions, are intended to identify these forward-looking statements. These forward looking statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our Company’s historical experience and our present expectations or projections. Forward-looking statements by the Company and its management are based on estimates, projections, beliefs and assumptions of management and are not guarantees of future performance. The Company disclaims any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement based on the occurrence of future events, the receipt of new information, or otherwise. Actual future performance, outcomes and results may differ materially from those expressed in forward-looking statements made by the Company and its management as a result of a number of important factors. Examples of these factors include (without limitation) rapid technological developments and changes in the telecommunications industries; ongoing deregulation (and the resulting likelihood of significantly increased price and product/service competition) in the telecommunications industry as a result of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 (the “1996 Act”) and other similar federal and state legislation and the federal and state rules and regulations enacted pursuant to that legislation; regulatory limitations on the Company’s ability to change its pricing for communications services; the possible future unavailability of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (“SFAS”) No.71 , Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation, to the Company’s wireline subsidiaries; and possible changes in the demand for the Company’s products and services. In addition to these factors, actual future performance, outcomes and results may differ materially because of other, more general, factors including (without limitation) changes in general industry and market conditions and growth rates; changes in interest rates or other general national, regional or local economic conditions; governmental and public policy changes; changes in accounting policies or practices adopted voluntarily or as required by accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America; and the continued availability of financing in the amounts, at the terms and on the conditions necessary to support the Company’s future business. Investors should also be aware that while ACS Group does, at various times, communicate with securities analysts, it is against the Company’s policy to disclose to them any material non-public information or other confidential information. Accordingly, investors should not assume that ACS Group agrees with any statement or report issued by an analyst irrespective of the content of the statement or report. To the extent that reports issued by securities analysts contain any projections, forecasts or opinions, such reports are not the responsibility of ACS Group. 2 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Introduction ACS Group was formed in 1998 by Fox Paine Company, members of the former senior management team of Pacific Telecom, Inc., and other experienced telecommunications industry executives. In May 1999, the Company acquired Century Telephone Enterprises, Inc.’s Alaska properties (“CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties”) and Anchorage Telephone Utility or ATU (collectively the “Predecessor Entities”). CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties were the incumbent provider of local telephone services in Juneau, Fairbanks and more than 70 rural communities in Alaska and provided Internet services to customers statewide. CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties included ACS of Fairbanks, Inc., ACS of Alaska, Inc., and ACS of the Northland, Inc. ATU was the largest local exchange carrier (“LEC”) in Alaska and provided local telephone and long distance services primarily in Anchorage and wireless services statewide. ATU provided long distance services through ATU Long Distance, Inc. and wireless services through MACtel, Inc. These companies are now known as ACS of Anchorage, Inc., ACS Long Distance, Inc. and ACS Wireless, Inc. On October29, 1999, the Company changed its name from ALEC Holdings, Inc. to Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. On January1, 2001, the Company established ACS InfoSource, Inc. as a separate operation and transferred to it the Company’s yellow pages directory advertising business and assets which were previously included as a component of four different local telephone exchange carriers operating in Alaska which are also wholly-owned subsidiaries of the Company. The consolidated financial statements for ACS Group represent the operations principally of the following entities: Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. • Alaska Communications Systems Holdings, Inc. (“ACS Holdings”) • ACS of Alaska, Inc. (“ACSAK”) • ACS of the Northland, Inc. (“ACSN”) • ACS of Fairbanks, Inc. (“ACSF”) • ACS of Anchorage, Inc. (“ACSA”) • ACS Wireless, Inc. (“ACSW”) • ACS InfoSource, Inc. (“ACSIS”) • ACS Internet, Inc. (“ACSI”) • ACS Long Distance, Inc. (“ACSLD”) • ACS Group is the leading diversified, facilities-based telecommunications provider in Alaska, offering local telephone, wireless, directory, Internet, and interexchange services to business and residential customers throughout the state. ACS Group is the largest telecommunications provider in Alaska using its own network facilities to provide full service end-to-end communications to its customers. At various times, ACS Group evaluates opportunities for establishing or acquiring other telecommunications businesses through acquisitions or otherwise in Alaska and elsewhere in the United States, and may make investments in such businesses in the future. ACS Group has focused its attention on local telephone, wireless, directory, Internet, and interexchange businesses. Local Telephone. With over 323,000 access lines, representing approximately 67% of the access lines provisioned in Alaska, ACS Group is the largest LEC in Alaska and the 14th largest in the U.S. The Company provides service to most of the state’s major population centers, including Anchorage, Juneau and Fairbanks. Wireless. ACS Group is the largest and only statewide provider of wireless services in Alaska, currently serving over 82,000 subscribers. Its wireless network covers over 478,000 residents, including all major population centers and highway corridors. The Company has upgraded to a fully digital network in substantially all of its service areas. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. 3 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Directory. ACS Group, through its subsidiary ACSIS, is the largest provider of published directory advertising in Alaska. The Company serves over 13,500 customers through its yellow page directory books tailored to serve the needs of each of its local exchange markets, with many customers advertising in multiple books. During 2002, ACSIS published ten different yellow pages, white pages or combined directory books covering approximately 95% of the State of Alaska’s population. ACSIS publishes the white pages directories under a publishing agreement with its affiliated LECs. ACSIS also provides an online directory product and other specialized advertising vehicles to its customers. Internet. ACS Group is the second largest provider of Internet access services in Alaska with approximately 46,000 customers. ACS Group offers dedicated and dial-up Internet access and digital subscriber line, (“DSL”) Internet access to its customers. Interexchange. ACS Group provides long distance and other interexchange services to approximately 70,000 customers in Alaska. ACS Group has migrated long distance traffic from leased circuits onto its own network infrastructure where possible, principally between its major markets of Anchorage, Fairbanks and Juneau. Products, Services and Revenue Sources ACS Group offers a broad portfolio of telecommunications services to residential and business customers in its markets. The Company believes that, as the communications marketplace continues to converge and competition continues to enter the market, the ability to offer an integrated package of communications products will provide a distinct competitive advantage, as well as increase customer loyalty, and thereby decrease customer turnover. The Company complements its local telephone services by actively marketing its wireless, directory, Internet, interexchange and other service offerings. Profit or loss and total assets for each of the Company’s segments is disclosed in Note 16 “Business Segments” of the Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. Consolidated Financial Statements. The following table sets forth the components of ACS Group’s consolidated revenues for the years ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (dollars in millions). Revenue by Source: Local network service $ 99.5 29.0 % $ 96.3 29.0 % $ 94.1 30.0 % 2002 2001 2000 Amount Percent Amount Percent Amount Percent Revenue for the Year Ended December 31, Network access Deregulated and other revenue Local telephone Wireless Directory Internet Interexchange Total $ 108.3 18.6 226.4 43.2 33.6 20.8 19.4 343.5 31.5 5.4 65.9 12.6 9.8 6.1 5.7 103.0 22.2 221.4 41.9 33.9 13.7 21.3 100.0 % $ 332.2 31.0 6.7 66.6 12.6 10.2 4.1 6.4 100.0 % 105.2 23.0 222.3 41.2 29.2 9.2 11.8 $ 313.5 33.5 7.3 70.9 13.1 9.3 2.9 3.8 100.0 % Local Telephone The Company provides local telephone service through its four LECs. Local telephone revenue consists of local network service, network access (including universal service revenue), and deregulated and other revenue, each of which is described below. 4 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Local Network Service Basic Local Network Service. Basic local network service enables customers to originate and receive telephone calls within a defined “exchange” area. The Company provides basic local services on a retail basis to residential and business customers, generally for a fixed monthly charge. The maximum amount that can be charged to a customer for basic local services is determined by rate proceedings involving the Regulatory Commission of Alaska (“RCA”). The Company charges business customers higher rates to recover a portion of the costs of providing local service to residential customers, as is customary in the industry. On average, U.S. business rates for basic local services have been over two times the rates of residential customers. Basic local service also includes non-recurring charges to customers for the installation of new products and services and recurring charges for enhanced features such as call waiting and caller identification. At December31, 2002, approximately 53% of ACS Group’s retail access lines served residential customers and 47% served business customers. Currently, monthly charges for basic local service for residential customers range from $9.42 to $16.30 in ACS Group’s service areas compared to the national average for urban areas of $14.11. Monthly charges for business customers range from $17.65 to $35.00 in ACS Group’s service areas compared to the national average for urban areas of $33.84. In November 2001, the Company was authorized by the RCA to increase on an interim basis certain rates in its largest market, Anchorage, by 24%. As a result, the Company increased residential service rates in Anchorage from $9.70 to $12.05 per month. See “Business — Regulation” for further discussion of regulatory matters including the Company’s local network service rate proceedings. The table below sets forth the annual growth in access lines for ACS Group and its Predecessor Entities from December31, 1998 to December31, 2002. The number of access lines shown represents all revenue producing access lines connected to both retail and wholesale customers . Retail access lines Wholesale access lines Unbundled network elements Total Local Telephone Access Lines Percentage Growth 2002 236,148 24,768 62,091 323,007 -3.0% 2001 261,002 22,859 49,062 332,923 1.1% As of December 31, 2000 272,936 17,303 39,221 329,460 1.2% 1999 281,726 15,680 28,202 325,608 8.4% 1998 266,704 13,010 20,680 300,394 6.0% On June1, 1999, as part of the consolidation of its operating and billing systems, ACS Group conformed the methodology by which the number of access lines is calculated across all of its local exchanges to that previously used for CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties. In the table above, for the year ended December31, 1999, the Company shows ATU’s number of access lines calculated using this method. If the number of ATU’s access lines in service at December31, 1998 was computed under this same method, the number of access lines at ATU would increase by 4,940 and the total number of access lines would equal 305,334 and the combined growth percentage would be 7.8% for 1999. Management believes that future access line growth is dependent on, among other things, the economic outlook in Alaska and the United States, the impact of technology and competition on line demand and population growth in the Company’s service areas. Competitive Local Network Service. The Company also provides interconnection through wholesale access to its basic local service and through leasing unbundled network elements (“UNEs”) to its competitors as required by the 1996 Act. Revenues for these services are included in local network service revenues. In November of 2001 the Company was authorized by the RCA to implement an interim and refundable rate increase of $1.07 per UNE loop for its Anchorage serving area, increasing the total rate to $14.92 from $13.85. The RCA has also lifted the Company’s rural exemption for the Fairbanks and Juneau serving areas and awarded interconnection rates to a competitor on a UNE basis of $19.19 and $16.71, respectively. The Company provided 86,859 lines to competitors in the Anchorage, Fairbanks and Juneau service areas on either a wholesale or UNE basis as of December31, 2002. The Company believes the UNE rates in place in all of its 5 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents markets are below its embedded and forward looking cost and are therefore non-compensatory. See “Business — Regulation” for further discussion of regulatory matters, including interconnection under the 1996 Act. While there is some seasonality in local network service, represented primarily by reduced line demand in the Alaskan winter as seasonal workers leave the state, operating results for local telephone services are not materially impacted by seasonal factors. Network Access Network access services arise in connection with the origination and termination of long distance, or toll, calls and typically involve more than one company in the provision of such long distance service on an end-to-end basis. Since toll calls are generally billed to the customer originating the call, a mechanism is required to compensate each company providing services relating to the call. This mechanism is the access charge, which the Company bills to each interexchange carrier for the use of its facilities to access the customer. The Company also receives universal service revenue, which it includes in its reported network access revenue. These components of network access revenue are described below. Intrastate Access Charges. ACS Group generates intrastate access revenue when an intrastate long distance call that involves an ACS Group LEC and an interexchange carrier is originated and terminated within the same state. The interexchange carrier pays the Company an intrastate access payment for either terminating or originating the call. The Company records the details of the call through its carrier access billing system and receives the access payment from the interexchange carrier. The Company also provides billing and collection (“BC”) services for interexchange carriers through negotiated BC agreements for certain types of toll calls placed by the Company’s local customers. ACS Group’s LECs in competitive areas are under their own stand-alone tariffs for intrastate access. In non-competitive areas, ACS Group’s LECs participate in a statewide tariff and access charge pooling arrangement that is administered by the Alaska Exchange Carriers Association (“AECA”). The access charge for ACS Group’s intrastate service is regulated by the RCA. Interstate Access Charges. ACS Group generates interstate access revenue when an interstate long distance call is originated from an Alaskan local calling area served by an ACS Group LEC and is terminated in a local calling area in another state, and vice versa. The Company bills interstate access charges in a manner similar to intrastate access charges. However, interstate access charges are regulated by the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) rather than the RCA. ACS Group’s LECs participate in a nationwide tariff and access charge pooling arrangement that is administered by the National Exchange Carrier Association (“NECA”) for all ACS Group’s LECs except ACSA. ACSA participates in the NECA common line tariff, but has its own interstate access tariff for traffic sensitive and special access services. Universal Service Revenue. Universal service revenue supplements the amount of local service revenue the Company receives to ensure that basic local service rates for customers in high cost rural areas are not significantly higher than rates charged in lower cost urban and suburban areas. The 1996 Act prescribed new standards applicable to universal service, including mechanisms for defining the types of services to be provided as part of a universal service program, specific goals or criteria applicable to universal service programs, new qualifications for receipt of universal service funding and new requirements for contributions to universal service funding. The FCC, in conjunction with a federal-state joint board composed of FCC and state commission members, has been working since passage of the 1996 Act to implement these new statutory provisions. The FCC has chosen to address universal service matters, initially for non-rural telephone companies, and subsequently for rural telephone companies. While new cost-identification models for non-rural local carriers were adopted effective on January1, 2000, similar models for rural carriers were rejected by the FCC, leaving previous Universal Service Fund (“USF”) calculations in place for the Federal High-Cost Fund. In accordance with the 1996 Act’s requirement to eliminate implicit subsidies, the FCC has created additional USF support mechanisms to compensate for support that had previously been provided implicitly through access revenue. While the joint board and the FCC continue to examine modifications to the universal service funding mechanisms, it is unlikely that any changes will have a near-term impact on ACS Group’s revenue. 6 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Interstate access, intrastate access, and universal service funding are all influenced by both LEC cost levels and by competitive local market penetration. Toll traffic originating or terminating on a competitors network does not generate access billings to interexchange carriers for ACS Group. Many of the underlying factors in jurisdictional cost separations studies that allow network costs to be recovered through access charges are diminished as competitive market penetration increases. Universal service funding may also diminish as a result of competitive local market penetration. Under FCC rules, when a competitive local exchange carrier (“CLEC”) is named an “eligible telecommunications carrier” as General Communication, Inc. (“GCI”) has been in Anchorage, Fairbanks and Juneau, universal service funding becomes portable to the CLEC on a per-line basis, further eroding the incumbent local exchange carriers (“ILECs”) revenue. Operating results for network access services are not materially impacted by seasonal factors. Deregulated and Other Revenue Deregulated and other revenues consist of BC contracts, space and power rents, pay telephone service, customer premise equipment (“CPE”) sales, and other miscellaneous revenues generated by the Company’s LECs. ACS Group seeks to capitalize on its local presence and network infrastructure by offering these additional services to customers and interexchange carriers. Deregulated and other revenue is generally not subject to seasonal impacts on operating results. Wireless ACS Group’s wireless business is currently managed separately from its LEC business and is subject to a different regulatory framework and cost structure. Wireless services are provided statewide under the ACS Wireless brand name . The primary sources of wireless revenue include subscriber access charges, airtime usage, toll charges, connection fees, roaming revenues, and enhanced features, such as caller identification and call waiting. A subscriber may purchase services separately or may purchase rate plans that package these services in different ways to fit different calling patterns and desired features. The table below sets forth the annual growth in the number of wireless subscribers served and total covered population for ACS Group and its Predecessor Entities from December31, 1998 to December31, 2002. Estimated covered population Ending subscribers Ending penetration 2002 2001 478,413 82,220 17.2% 468,622 80,120 17.1% As of December 31, 2000 462,057 75,933 16.4% 1999 1998 460,802 73,068 15.9% 460,162 66,572 14.5% Management believes there are opportunities to improve the penetration rates of its wireless operations in Southeastern Alaska, and in particular, Juneau. Management also believes that the market for wireless services will continue to grow with the expansion of the wireless industry as a whole. ACS Group also owns 10 megahertz E Block PCS licenses covering Anchorage, Fairbanks and Juneau which were purchased by CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties in 1997 and acquired by the Company when it purchased CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties on May14, 1999. During 2002, the Company purchased 10 megahertz F Block PCS licenses. In 2002, ACS Wireless in accordance with FCC requirements, deployed a limited turn up of its CDMA 1X services in all E and F Block markets. Management is analyzing the further build out of these services to enhance the Company’s offerings in its overall business. Wireless revenue declines in the winter months and increases in the summer months due to Alaska’s northern latitude and the wide swing in available daylight and changes in weather patterns between summer and winter and their effect on business, tourism and subscriber calling patterns . However, operating results for wireless services are not materially impacted by seasonal factors. 7 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Directory ACS Group provides directory advertising services, commonly known as yellow pages advertising, to its customers in the State of Alaska. During 2002, ACSIS published ten different yellow pages, white pages or combined directory books covering approximately 95% of the State of Alaska’s population. ACSIS publishes the white pages directories under a publishing agreement with its affiliated LECs. Additionally, ACSIS provides internet-based directory advertising services. The Company provides these services under a contractual arrangement with a directory publishing company . Directory advertising is billed in conjunction with local telephone service under a BC agreement . Directory revenues are not materially affected by seasonality. The Company has been authorized by its Board of Directors to evaluate the possible disposition of its directory business, ACSIS. This transaction, if completed, would result in a de-leveraging of the Company’s balance sheet and generate cash for other corporate objectives. The Company expects to file on or about March6, 2003, a preliminary prospectus with Canadian securities regulators relating to a proposed public offering in Canada of ACSIS through a Canadian income fund. Any prospective sale of ACSIS is subject to the approval of the Company’s Board of Directors, which is dependent upon terms and pricing. Any such sale is also contingent upon a number of conditions including approval by securities regulators, the approval of an amendment of certain terms and conditions of the Company’s senior credit facility and market conditions. There can be no assurance that the Company will consummate any transaction to sell ACSIS. Internet ACS Group provides Internet access services to approximately 46,000 customers as of December31, 2002. In order to offer Internet access, the Company provides local dial-up telephone numbers for its customers . ACS Group also offers high speed DSL to its customers in its major LEC service territories . These local dial-up numbers and dedicated DSL connections allow customers access, through a modem connection on their computer, to a series of computer servers ACS Group owns and maintains. These servers allow customers to access their e-mail accounts and to be routed to local access points that connect customers to the Internet. ACS Group charges customers either a flat rate for unlimited Internet usage or a usage sensitive rate. Operating results for Internet access services are not materially impacted by seasonal factors . Interexchange ACS Group’s predecessors began offering long distance services on a resale basis in October 1997, primarily in Anchorage. The Company currently has approximately 70,000 long distance customers and less than 10% of total interexchange revenues in Alaska. Before August 1998, CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties were precluded from entering the long distance business by a non-competition agreement with ATT Alascom which was signed when Pacific Telecom sold Alascom, Inc. to ATT in 1995. In April 1999, ACS Group entered into a settlement agreement with GCI under which the Company agreed to enter into a number of new business arrangements and to settle a number of outstanding disputes, including GCI’s opposition to ACS Group’s acquisitions of CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties and ATU. As part of this agreement and to support other aspects of the Company’s business strategy, ACS Group purchased from GCI $19.5million of fiber capacity for high-speed links within Alaska and for termination of traffic in the lower 49 states. Subsequently, the Company entered into an amendment to the purchase agreement with GCI, whereby, among other things, ACS Group agreed to purchase additional capacity for $19.5million . The Company fulfilled this commitment to purchase additional capacity on January12, 2001. ACS Group is subject to numerous conditions imposed by the RCA and, to a lesser degree, by the FCC on the manner in which the Company conducts its long distance operations. The restrictions are intended to prohibit cross-subsidization from the regulated LEC to the long distance affiliate and discrimination against other long distance providers in favor of a LEC’s long distance affiliate. Among the conditions applied to ACS Group’s long distance affiliate are those which: 8 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents • • • require the Company to hold all books and records, management, employees and administrative services separate, except that services may be provided among affiliates through arm’s length affiliated interest agreements, prohibit ACSA, ACSAK, ACSN and ACSF from bundling local and intra-state long distance services until competition develops in their local markets and prevent the Company from joint ownership of telephone transmission or switching facilities with the LEC and from using the LEC’s assets as collateral for its own indebtedness. Although there is some seasonal impact on customer usage patterns for long distance, operating results are not materially impacted by seasonal factors. Network Facilities As of December31, 2002, ACS Group owned 65 host switches serving over 323,000 access lines. All of the Company’s access lines are served by digital switches provided predominately by Nortel Networks. ACS Group’s switches are linked through a combination of extensive aerial, underground and buried cable, including 640 sheath miles of fiber optic cable, as well as digital microwave and satellite links. The Company has 100% single-party services (one customer per access line), and believes substantially all of its major switches have current generic software upgrades installed, allowing for the full range of enhanced customer features . ACS Group has integrated numerous network elements to offer a variety of services and applications that meet the increasingly sophisticated needs of customers. These elements include Signal System 7 signaling networks, voice messaging platforms, digital switching, DSL and, in some communities, integrated service digital network access. As the telecommunications industry experiences significant changes in technology, customer demand and competition, the Company intends to introduce additional enhancements. Network operations and monitoring are provided by ACS Group’s network operating control center located in Anchorage. The network operating control center has technicians staffed seven days a week, 24 hours a day. The Company also has customer care call center facilities in Anchorage and Fairbanks along with additional customer care facilities in Juneau, Sitka, Kenai/Soldotna and Kodiak . All of these facilities offer extended business hours to efficiently handle customer inquiries and orders for service. ACS Group’s wireless operations consist of four digital switching centers, 111 cell sites and three repeaters covering substantially all major population centers and highway corridors in Alaska plus one analog switch and cell site covering Barrow, Alaska. The Company’s switching and cell site infrastructure is linked by fiber and digital microwave. ACS Group’s network operating control center located in Anchorage also supports all wireless switches in ACS Group’s markets . Customer care centers are located in Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau, North Pole, Homer and Kenai/Soldotna. The Company has enhanced its network to accommodate developing products and technology. The Company completed its Multi-Protocol Label Switching over Asynchronous Transfer Mode network or MPLS/ATM network in early 2002. Core MPLS/ATM nodes were installed in Anchorage, Fairbanks, Kenai, Juneau, the Mat-Su valley and Seattle. ACS Group believes the MPLS/ATM network enhances its capability to provide a complete suite of converged telecommunications, data and video services and achieve significant operating efficiencies. ACS Group currently offers a variety of products and services and is able to converge them all over its MPLS core network: • virtual private networks and lines, • voice over Internet Protocol (“IP”) services, • transparent local area networks (LAN)and proprietary LANs and wide area networks (WAN), • high speed Internet access, • managed services and • video and video conferencing. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. 9 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Customers ACS Group has three basic types of customers for the services of its LECs: • business and residential customers located in their local service areas that pay for local phone service, • interexchange carriers that pay for access to long distance calling customers located within the Company’s local service areas and • CLECs that pay for wholesale access to the Company’s network in order to provide competitive local service on either a wholesale or UNE basis as prescribed under the 1996 Act. Approximately 53% of ACS Group’s retail access lines served residential customers, while 47% served business customers. ACS Group also has approximately 82,000 wireless subscribers, 13,500 directory advertising customers, 46,000 Internet subscribers and 70,000 long-distance subscribers consisting substantially of retail residential and business consumers. During 2002 one customer accounted for 11% of consolidated revenues and no other customers accounted for more than 10% of consolidated revenue. Competition Local Telephone Service ILECs may be subject to any of several types of competition: • facilities-based competition from providers with their own local service network, • • resale competition from resale interconnection, or providers who purchase local service from the ILEC at wholesale rates and resell these services to their customers, competition from UNE interconnection, that is, providers who lease UNEs from the ILEC, and • alternatives to local service networks, including wireless, IP, satellite, and cable telephony. The geographic characteristics of rural areas presently make the entrance of most facilities-based competitors uneconomical because of the significant capital investment required and the limited market size. Therefore, ACS Group believes competition is likely to come from resale interconnection or UNE interconnection. However, in the future, competition though other means, such as cable or wireless telephony may become economically feasible. There are no regional Bell operating companies in Alaska. In September 1997, GCI and ATT Alascom, the two largest long distance carriers in Alaska, began providing competitive local telephone services in Anchorage. GCI competes principally through UNE interconnection with ACSA facilities, while ATT Alascom competes primarily by reselling ACSA’s services. Competition is based upon price and pricing plans, types of services offered, customer service, billing services, and quality and reliability of service. GCI has focused principally on advertising discount plans for bundled services. ATT Alascom’s strategy has been to resell ACSA’s service as part of a package of local and long distance services. As a result, ACSA now has approximately 50% competitive market penetration as of December31, 2002 . The Company expects GCI and ATT Alascom to continue to compete for local telephone business. As “rural telephone companies” under the 1996 Act, ACS Group’s rural LECs have historically been exempt from the obligation to lease their facilities or resell their services on a wholesale discount basis to CLECs seeking interconnection. However, on June30, 1999 the Alaska Public Utilities Commission (“APUC”) 10 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ordered these exemptions terminated for certain rural service areas of ACS Group, and on October11, 1999, the RCA, which replaced the APUC on July1, 1999, sustained the APUC’s order. As a result, ACS Group’s rural LECs entered into interconnection arbitration with GCI . This arbitration resulted in interconnection agreements for certain rural service areas of ACS Group . See “Business – Regulation” for further discussion. In October 2000, the RCA approved interconnection agreements under the 1996 Act between ACSF, ACSN and ACSAK and GCI for its Fairbanks and Juneau markets. Commencing in April 2001, the Company received its first orders for resale of local services in Fairbanks. As of December31, 2002, ACS Group estimates that it now has approximately 75% market share in Fairbanks. Through December31, 2002, GCI has competed in Fairbanks primarily through reselling services and through UNE interconnection . Similar trends are being experienced by ACSAK in its Juneau market where, as of December31, 2002, the Company has approximately 85% market share. While GCI claims the right to resell local service in portions of the ACSN territory, it has yet to place any orders to do so. ACS Group expects increasing competition from providers of various services that provide users the means to bypass its network. Long distance companies may construct, modify or lease facilities to transmit traffic directly from a user to a long distance company. Cable television companies also may be able to modify their networks to partially or completely bypass the Company’s local network. GCI, the dominant cable operator in Alaska and a CLEC, is currently testing cable telephony service and recently announced plans to start switching its local phone service customers in Anchorage over to its cable system in 2004. In addition, while wireless telephone services have historically complemented traditional LEC services, the Company anticipates that existing and emerging wireless technologies may increasingly compete with LEC services. For example, ATT had introduced its fixed wireless product to the Anchorage market. Although ATT’s fixed wireless product was subsequently abandoned, communications technology manufacturers continue to work on alternatives to traditional LEC service. At this time it is not possible to predict the impact of this product on the Company’s share of the local market. Technological developments in wireless telephone features, personal communications services, digital microwave and other wireless technologies are expected to further permit the development of alternatives to traditional wireline services. Wireless Services The wireless telecommunications industry is experiencing significant technological change, as evidenced by the increasing pace of improvements in the capacity and quality of digital technology, shorter cycles for new products and enhancements, and changes in consumer preferences and expectations. ACS Group believes that the demand for wireless telecommunications services is likely to increase significantly as equipment costs and service rates continue to decline and equipment becomes more convenient and functional. Competition is based on price, quality, network coverage, packaging features and brand reputation. In addition, there are six PCS licensees in each of the Company’s wireless service areas. ACS Group holds PCS licenses covering Anchorage, Fairbanks and Juneau . ACS Group currently competes with at least one other wireless provider in each of its wireless service areas, including ATT Wireless Services, Alaska DigiTel, and Dobson Communications. Recently, Dobson Communications and ATT Wireless announced a property swap which the Company anticipates will remove ATT Wireless from direct competition and give Dobson Communications a statewide competition position. The Company believes that the unique and vast terrain and the high cost of PCS system buildout make entrance into markets outside Anchorage uneconomical at this time . As the market for simple wireless voice services approaches maturity, providers are experiencing downward pressure on price . ACS Group is positioning itself to offset this impact by bringing new higher margin services to market. By developing products for targeted market segments, the Company is leveraging the advantage in market share and geographical coverage to attract new customers and increase monthly revenues from existing customers. The Company continuously evaluates new service offerings in order to differentiate it from its competitors, produce additional revenues and increase margins. 11 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Directory The Alaskan directory advertising industry is competitive. ACSIS competes in Alaska with other directory businesses and other forms of advertising media, including newspapers, radio, television, the Internet, billboards and direct mail. The other directory publishers in Alaska include Phone Directories Company, Inc., which is an independent directory publisher based in Utah and GTE Directories Corporation, which is a directory publisher based in Texas. ACSIS also competes with Alltel Publishing Corporation, which publishes directories for an incumbent telephone company operating in the region to the Northwest of Anchorage, known as Matanuska Telephone Association. Alltel also recently announced that it will publish a directory in Anchorage for GCI, the dominant cable operator in Alaska and a CLEC, which is expected to be published in December 2003. Management believes that ACSIS competes effectively against these providers and that it has a leading market share in each of the areas it serves. Internet-based directories have emerged as a new medium for customers. Although advertising on the Internet still represents only a small part of the total advertising market, it may become increasingly important as an advertising medium. Most major yellow pages publishers operate an Internet-based directory business. ACSIS competes through its Internet site, acsyellowpages.com, with these publishers, with other Internet sites providing classified directory information, such as Anchoragedailynews.com, alaskayellowpages.com, and with search engines such as Yahoo!, Alta Vista and Excite, some of which have entered into affiliate agreements with other major directory publishers. Internet Services The market for Internet access services is highly competitive in most markets in the state. There are few significant barriers to entry, and the Company expects that competition will intensify in the future. ACS Group currently competes with a number of established online services companies, interexchange carriers, LECs with Internet subsidiaries, satellite service providers and cable television companies. The Company believes that its ability to compete successfully will depend upon a number of factors, including the reliability and security of its network infrastructure, the ease of access to the Internet, the availability of broadband ISP access and the pricing policies of its competitors . During 2002, the Company continued to feature its DSL services in Anchorage, Fairbanks, Juneau, Kenai/Soldotna, Homer and Sitka, Alaska for both residential and business applications. Long Distance Services The long distance telecommunications market is highly competitive. Competition in the long distance business is based primarily on price, although service bundling, branding, customer service, billing services and quality play a role in customer’s choices to some extent. The Company currently offers long distance service to customers located primarily in the more populous communities within its service territory. ATT Alascom and GCI are currently the two major competing long distance providers in Alaska. The Company currently has less than 10% of total interexchange revenues in Alaska . The Company provides traditional “1” direct distance dialing (DDD), toll-free services, calling cards and private line services for data and voice applications . In Spring 2001, the Company discontinued its long distance “Infinite Minutes” program, and introduced several new flat-fee programs marketed as “Easy Choices.” The new programs allow customers to purchase interstate minutes of use in blocks of time for a single monthly fee . ACS Group expects to continue offering innovative products of this nature in the future. Sales and Marketing The Predecessor Entities have historically conducted their sales and marketing operations for each of their respective products on a stand-alone basis, with each product line having its own sales force and marketing department. ACS Group has consolidated its product and service offerings under the “Alaska Communications Systems” and “ACS” brands, subject to regulatory and strategic business considerations. 12 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Key components of the Company’s sales and marketing strategy include: • establishing name recognition of the ACS brand across all product and service offerings, • marketing current and future service offerings aggressively, • providing simplified packaged service offerings, • centralizing marketing functions, • improving quality, reliability and customer service, • developing and delivering to the market new products and services in line with strategic goals, and • enhancing direct sales efforts. ACS Group believes that it can leverage its position as an integrated, one-stop provider of telecommunications services with strong positions in local access, wireless, directory, Internet, and interexchange long distance and data markets . By pursuing, within the bounds of any applicable regulatory constraints, a marketing strategy that takes advantage of these characteristics and that facilitates cross-selling and packaging of its products and services, the Company believes it can increase penetration of new product offerings, improve customer retention rates, increase its share of its customers’ overall telecommunications expenditures, and achieve continued revenue and operating cash flow growth. ACS Group has begun, to a limited extent, within regulatory bounds, marketing local telephone services in attractively priced, packaged service offerings with wireless, long distance and Internet services. ACS Group believes packaged offerings are popular with customers because they allow customers to enjoy pricing for a number of services at a discount to a la carte pricing of individual services. Subject to regulatory limitations, the Company intends to expand this strategy, which it expects will increase the average revenue per customer, and result in a more loyal and satisfied customer base and in reduced churn. The Company has established a sales and marketing organization where marketing strategies are centralized and sales functions are based locally. To enhance its direct selling efforts, the Company has established additional customer and retail service centers in its larger service areas, such as Juneau and Kenai/Soldotna, and intends to enhance its call center operations through a combination of technology investments, training, and incentive compensation programs for call center employees. Employees ACS Group considers employee relations to be good. As of December31, 2002, the Company employed a total of 1,103 regular full-time employees, 869 of whom were represented by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 1547 (“IBEW”). On November2, 1999, the IBEW membership for ACS Group ratified the terms of a master collective bargaining agreement that governs the terms and conditions of employment for all IBEW represented employees working for ACS Group in the State of Alaska . The master agreement embraces a labor-management relationship that is founded on trust, cooperation and shared goals. The November 1999 agreement, which expires December31, 2006, provides for wage increases up to 4% in specified years based on the annual increases in the consumer price index for Anchorage as reported by the U.S. Department of Labor CPI-U. The last wage increase under the agreement was implemented in July 2001 and the next scheduled wage review is in January 2003. The master agreement also limits ACS Group’s health and welfare contributions for represented employees to 4% annually. There have been no work stoppages or strikes, and none are anticipated. ACS Group also enjoys good relations with the non-represented employee group. Non-represented employees qualify for wage increases based on individual and Company performance, and key employees are also eligible for performance-based incentives. ACS Group provides a total benefits package, including health, welfare, and retirement components, that is competitive in ACS Group’s market. 13 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Website Access to Reports ACS Group makes its periodic and current reports available, free of charge, on its investor website, www.ALSK.com, as soon as practicable after such material is electronically filed with, or furnished to, the SEC. Regulation Overview The Company’s local telephone operating subsidiaries, ACSA, ACSF, ACSAK, and ACSN, are each “telecommunications carriers” and ILECs under the Communications Act of 1934 (the “Communications Act”), which was amended by the 1996 Act, and are subject to the jurisdiction of the FCC and the RCA . ACSLD, ACS Group’s long distance subsidiary, is also subject to both the FCC and RCA’s regulatory jurisdiction . ACS Group’s wireless operations are also subject to FCC jurisdiction because they are telecommunications carriers and because they hold FCC-issued licenses. Federal Regulation Under the federal regulatory scheme, ILECs are required to comply with the Communications Act and the applicable rules and regulations of the FCC. In substantially overhauling the Communications Act, the 1996 Act was intended to, among other things, eliminate unproductive regulatory burdens and promote competition. Despite this, telecommunications carriers are still subject to extensive ongoing regulatory requirements. For instance, ACS Group’s ILEC subsidiaries are required to maintain accounting records in accordance with the Uniform System of Accounts, to structure interstate access charges according to FCC rules, and to charge for interstate services at a rate of return not to exceed a rate prescribed by the FCC. The FCC also must give prior consent to transfers of control and assignments of radio frequency licenses. The FCC requires ILECs providing interstate access services to file tariffs with the FCC reflecting the rates, terms and conditions of those services. These tariffs are subject to review and potential objection by the FCC or third parties. Additionally, all of the Company’s LECs are “ILECs” within the meaning of the 1996 Act. As such, they are subject to various additional requirements under the 1996 Act, including specific interconnection duties such as providing requesting telecommunications carriers with UNEs and wholesale discounted end user services for resale. Long distance companies are now precluded from filing tariffs for interstate domestic and international services . Federal tariffing has been replaced with Internet web site posting of offers, terms and prices . State Regulation Telecommunications companies subject to the RCA’s jurisdiction are required to obtain certificates of public convenience and necessity prior to operating as a public utility in Alaska. The RCA is responsible for approving new certificates and any transfers of existing certificates. In addition, the RCA is responsible for implementing a portion of the competitive requirements of the 1996 Act, as well as for regulating intrastate access and rates for local and other services of local telephone companies. After passage of the 1996 Act, the RCA’s predecessor, APUC, adopted a plan to address competition issues across Alaska. The APUC established multiple dockets to investigate different competition-related issues, including revising local and long distance market structures, reforming its intrastate access charge system and establishing a state universal service fund . In addition to its preliminary actions to mandate access charge depooling for ILECs operating in competitive markets, the RCA made operational the new Alaska Universal Service Fund (“AUSF”) . In a subsequent rulemaking, the RCA revised its eligibility standards for companies receiving high-cost switching support from the AUSF . These rules resulted in a loss of support to ACS Group’s rural affiliates . Rather than seeking interim local relief for this cost recovery shift, ACS Group has opted to include consideration of this issue in the more comprehensive rate proceedings described below. 14 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents In connection with regulatory approval of ACS Group’s acquisitions of CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties and ATU in 1999, the APUC imposed several conditions on its operating companies. Among those conditions was a requirement that ACSA, ACSF, ACSAK, and ACSN each file revenue requirement, cost of service and rate design studies no later than July 2001 . All of these companies except ACSF were also required to file updated depreciation analyses concurrently with the rate case filings . The revenue requirement studies were subsequently bifurcated from the cost of service and rate design studies . In conformance with RCA orders, all revenue requirement studies and testimonies have been filed . Following a hearing and decisions as to revenue requirements, the companies will file their cost of service and rate design studies and testimony . In addition, restrictions were placed on the ability of ACS Group’s LECs to bundle intrastate service offerings with ACSLD . Having secured both LEC certification and interconnection agreements to serve the local exchange markets in Juneau and Fairbanks, Alaska, and numerous smaller communities in Alaska, GCI’s CLEC operation has been designated an “Eligible Telecommunications Carrier” (“ETC”) by the RCA for Anchorage, Juneau, Fairbanks and Fort Wainwright . ETC designation is an essential first step in securing “portable” or shared universal service support . ACS Group’s operating companies are currently designated as ETCs in the same markets for which GCI has received this designation. Under existing FCC regulations, ILECs may seek, through filings with state commissions, the disaggregation of study areas into multiple zones for purposes of universal service support . Filings reflecting two-zone disaggregation plans have already been made by ACSF and ACSN for its Glacier State study area. Cost Recovery and Revenue Recognition As regulated common carriers, the operating subsidiary companies of ACS Group have the right to an opportunity to set maximum rates at a level that allows the Company to recover the reasonable costs incurred in the provision of regulated telecommunications services and to earn a reasonable rate of return on the investment required to provide these services. These costs are recovered through: • monthly charges to end users for basic local telephone services and enhanced service offerings, • • • access charges to interexchange carriers for originating and terminating interstate and intrastate interexchange calls, along with an end-user access charge referred to as a Subscriber Line Charge interconnection charges, wholesale service charges, UNE charges, and other rates to competing carriers interconnecting with the Company’s networks or reselling its services and high-cost support mechanisms, such as USF and AUSF. In conjunction with the recovery of costs and establishment of rates for regulated services, a LEC must first determine its aggregate costs and then allocate those costs between regulated and nonregulated services. After identifying the regulated costs of providing local telephone service, a LEC must allocate those costs between state and federal jurisdictions and among its various interstate and intrastate services . This process is complicated by the necessity to allocate specific pieces of plant and equipment to a particular service because a LEC’s plant and equipment are utilized for different jurisdictional services, such as local telephone and interstate and intrastate access. This process is referred to as “separations” and is governed primarily by the FCC’s rules and regulations. The underlying legal purpose of separations rules is to define how a carrier’s expenses are allocated and recovered from federal and state jurisdictions. The FCC is considering whether to modify or eliminate the current separations process. This decision could indirectly increase or reduce earnings of carriers subject to separations rules by reallocating costs between the federal and state jurisdictions . However, maximum rates for regulated services and the amount of high-cost support are set by the FCC with respect to interstate services and by the RCA with respect to intrastate services . 15 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Interstate End-User Rates The deployment of the local telephone network from the switching facility to the customer is known as the “local loop” and is one of the most significant costs incurred by a LEC in providing telephone service. The FCC has established a rate structure that provides for the recovery of a portion of the cost of the local loop allocated to the interstate jurisdiction directly from the end user customer through the assessment of a subscriber line charge. The remaining portion of the local loop costs are recovered from interstate access charges to an interexchange carrier or, in some circumstances, from the federal USF. The FCC recently increased the cap for subscriber line charges assessed by the Company’s LECs as part of a comprehensive review of its rules that also lowered carrier-paid interstate access charges and created explicit universal service support for interstate-allocated local loop costs . As a result of the market and geographic conditions in rural areas, the costs of providing local loop and switching services are often higher than in urban areas. In the absence of an accommodation in the FCC rules to address this fact, a substantial portion of the costs of smaller LECs would remain allocated to the intrastate jurisdiction placing substantial pressure on such carriers to charge higher rates for intrastate services. Accordingly, the FCC provides for additional interstate cost recovery by eligible telecommunications carriers through the federal USF. The federal USF is available to carriers whose local loop costs are significantly above the national average as calculated pursuant to FCC rules. Recent FCC rulings have made this high-cost support available to a competitive carrier, on an averaged per line basis, for those lines serving customers switching to the competitive carrier. See “Promotion of Universal Service,” below. Interstate Access Rates Interstate access rates are developed on the basis of a LEC’s measurement of its interstate costs for the provision of access service to interexchange carriers divided by its projected demand for access service. The resulting rates are published in a company’s interstate access tariff and filed with the FCC, at which time they are subject to challenge by third parties and to review by the FCC. The FCC recognized that this rate making and tariff filing process may be administratively burdensome for small LECs. Accordingly, the FCC established NECA, in 1983 to, among other things, develop common interstate access service rates, terms and conditions. NECA develops interstate access rates on the basis of data that are provided individually by participating LECs and blended to yield average rates. These rates are intended to generate revenue equal to the aggregate costs plus a return on the investment of all of the participants. Currently, the authorized maximum rate of return used in setting interstate access rates is 11.25%. On August24, 2000, GCI filed a formal complaint with the FCC under various provisions of the Communications Act (as amended), alleging that ACSA (formerly known as ATU) exceeded its federally authorized rates of return related to the 1997-1998 monitoring period . The principal issue raised in the complaint focuses on the proper jurisdictional recognition (federal versus state) of minutes of use associated with Internet service provider traffic . On January24, 2001, the FCC issued an order finding for GCI on the matter and ordering the Company to pay GCI approximately $2.7million plus interest . The Company appealed this order in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and the FCC issued a stay concerning the obligation to pay GCI during the pendency of the appeal . On March4, 2002, the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral argument in the matter. On May21, 2002, the court issued its decision finding that the FCC could rule that ISP traffic is intrastate in nature, but that the FCC could not order refunds for those periods during which the Company’s tariffs were deemed lawful. The matter was remanded back to the FCC for recalculation of any refunds that may be appropriate given the tariffs that have been deemed lawful and for reconsideration of the interest rate imposed in the FCC’s original order on any refunds that may eventually be ordered. In March 2003, ACS entered into a settlement agreement with GCI covering both the 1997-1998 monitoring period and similar issues GCI had raised with respect to the 1999-2000 monitoring period. 16 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Individual participating LECs are likely to have costs of providing service that are either higher or lower than the revenues generated by applying the overall NECA tariff rate. To rectify this result, the revenues generated by applying the NECA rates are pooled from all of the participating companies and redistributed on the basis of each individual company’s costs. The result of this process not only eliminates the burden of individual tariff filing, but also produces a system in which small companies can share and spread risk. For example, if a smaller LEC filed its own tariff and subsequently suffered the loss of major customers that utilize interstate access service, the LEC could suffer significant under-recovery of its costs. In the NECA pool environment, the impact of this loss is reduced because it is spread over all of the pool participants. NECA operates separate pools for traffic sensitive costs, which are primarily switching costs, and non-traffic sensitive costs, which are primarily loop costs. Companies are also free to develop and administer their own interstate access charges if they choose not to participate in the pools. ACS Group’s rural LECs participate in both the traffic sensitive and non-traffic sensitive NECA pools. ACSA files its own traffic sensitive access tariffs with the FCC but participates in the NECA non-traffic sensitive pool. End User Local Rates The levels of rates charged to end-users for the provision of basic local service are generally subject to rate-of-return regulation administered by the RCA. Local rates have historically been set at a level that will allow recovery of embedded costs for local service divided by the number of services and customers. Competitive forces, however, may prevent local rates from being sufficient to recover costs for local service in the future. Recognized costs include an allowance for a rate of return on investment in plant used to provide local service. Rate cases are typically infrequent, carrier-initiated and require the carrier to meet substantial burdens of proof. All ACS Group’s affiliate LECs filed revenue requirement studies on July1, 2001 . A hearing commenced on the revenue requirement for these LECs on March4, 2002 . While a final decision has yet to be rendered on the LEC’s revenue requirements, it appears that ACSF and ACSN will face revenue requirement reductions while ACSAK will have an increased revenue requirement. The likely revenue requirement for ACSA can not be determined at this time. The ACS LECs will file cost of service and rate design studies and testimony, and have a second hearing, to arrive at final adjudicated rates following the final rulings on revenue requirements. Competitive Local Exchange Regulations The former APUC adopted regulations to govern competition in the local exchange marketplace. The transitional regulations provide for, among other things: • initial classification of all ILECs, including the Company’s rural properties and ACSA, as dominant carriers, • symmetrical requirements that all carriers, both dominant and nondominant, offer all retail services for resale at wholesale rates, • • substantial dominant carrier pricing flexibility in competitive areas, under which carriers may reduce retail rates, offer new or repackaged services and implement special contracts for retail service upon 30days’ notice. Only rate increases affecting existing services are subject to full cost support showings for LECs in areas with local competition and application limited initially to the ACSA market, and in 2002, extended to the ACSF and ACSAK markets. ACSN anticipates filing a petition with the RCA to extend application upon the commencement of facilities-based competition. Intrastate Access Rates In the past, the APUC had required all local companies in Alaska to pool their access costs and has set an annual statewide average price for access service. Each LEC charges interexchange carrier fees for originating or terminating long distance calls on its network based on the statewide average cost of access rather than on its individual costs of access. Access revenues are collected in a pool administered by the AECA and 17 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents then redistributed to the LECs based on their actual costs. With the passage of the 1996 Act and increased competition in the local exchange market, the APUC began a process of reforming intrastate access charges . Under recent revisions to the Alaska access system, LECs not yet subject to local competition continue to participate in the AECA pool. Participants in this pool recover their costs based on the embedded cost of services most recently authorized by the RCA. In the event of competitive entry into a dominant incumbent carrier’s service area, these revisions also require the dominant LEC to exit the pool and initiate separate access charge tariffs. Dominant LECs subjected to competitive entry have the right to propose that their access charges be based on market rates. The only ACS LEC remaining in the AECA pool as of December31, 2002 is ACSN. The RCA is currently advancing a proceeding to examine whether changes to the current annual process for establishing access charges are warranted. The RCA issued a new access charge reform Notice of Inquiry in early 2001 which will target further substantive changes in access charge derivation. An additional consequence of this access reform is the continued removal of subsidies implicit in access pricing . The RCA, for example, has adopted regulations which limit switching support to local companies with access lines of 20,000 or less. This change has reduced the amount of AUSF which the Company’s rural LECs receive and the resulting cost recovery shift will be addressed in the local service rate cases commenced in 2001. The AUSF serves as a complement to the federal USF, but must meet federal statutory criteria concerning consistency with federal rules and regulations. Currently, the AUSF subsidizes a portion of higher cost carriers’ switching costs, the costs of lifeline service, which supports rates of low income customers, and a portion of the cost of Public Interest Pay Telephones. Recent proposals have targeted the AUSF as a source of funding for cost shifts that are likely to occur as a result of in-state access charge reform . It is unclear the degree to which the AUSF might be used to absorb cost shifts that result if federal universal service support is scaled back in the future. The Telecommunications Act of 1996 Among other things, the 1996 Act was enacted to enhance competition without jeopardizing the availability of nationwide universal service at affordable rates. These two objectives have resulted in a complex set of rules intended to promote competitive entry in the provision of local telephone services except where entry would adversely affect the provision of universal service or the public interest. Promotion of Local Service Competition and Rural Exemptions The 1996 Act made competitive entry into the local telephone business more attractive to other carriers by removing barriers to competition. In order to promote competition, the 1996 Act established new interconnection rules generally requiring LECs to allow competing carriers to interconnect with their local networks. Congress recognized, however, that when the desire to promote competition conflicted with the ability of existing carriers to provide universal service to higher cost customers, LECs classified as “Rural Telephone Companies” should be exempted from interconnection requirements until the continuation of the exemption was no longer required by the public interest, as defined in the 1996 Act . Under the 1996 Act, all LECs, including both ILECs and new competitive carriers, are required to: • offer reasonable and nondiscriminatory resale of their telecommunications services, • ensure that customers can keep their telephone numbers when changing carriers, • • ensure that competitors’ customers can use the same number of digits when dialing and receive nondiscriminatory access to telephone numbers, operator service, directory assistance and directory listing, provide access to telephone poles, ducts, conduits and rights of way, to the extent required by the Communications Act, and 18 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents • compensate competitors for the costs of transporting and terminating telecommunications traffic. The 1996 Act also requires ILECs to: • negotiate in good faith the terms and conditions of interconnection with any competitive carrier making a request for same, • interconnect their facilities and equipment with any requesting telecommunications carrier at any technically feasible point, • • • • unbundle and provide nondiscriminatory access to UNEs, such as local loops, switches and transport facilities, at nondiscriminatory rates and on nondiscriminatory terms and conditions, unless such carriers are exempt as rural telephone companies, offer resale interconnection at wholesale rates, provide reasonable notice of changes in the information necessary for transmission and routing of services over the ILEC’s facilities or in the information necessary for interoperability and provide for the physical collocation of equipment necessary for interconnection or access to UNEs at the premises of the ILEC, at rates, terms and conditions that are just, reasonable and nondiscriminatory. In order to implement interconnection requirements, ILECs generally enter into negotiated interconnection arrangements with competing carriers. Competitors are required to compensate a LEC for the cost of providing interconnection services. In the case of resale interconnection, the rules provide that the rates charged should be on a wholesale basis and reflect the current retail rates of the ILEC, excluding the portion of costs avoided by the ILEC. In the case of UNE interconnection, rates are based on costing methodologies that employ a forward-looking economic cost pricing methodology known as Total Element Long Run Incremental Cost (“TELRIC”). On January25, 1999, in ATT Corp. et al. v. Iowa Utilities Board et al. 525 U.S. 366 (1999) (“Iowa I”), the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the FCC’s authority to develop national pricing guidelines, but the Supreme Court did not evaluate the substance of these rules. The Supreme Court did hold, however, that the FCC had not properly applied the statutory “necessary and impair” standard for determining which elements of their networks the ILECs must unbundle. The Supreme Court remanded the case to the FCC for further consideration of the unbundling standard, and remanded the remainder of the issues to the Eighth Circuit. On remand, some ILECs argued that the FCC improperly placed upon them the burden of proof in rural exemption proceedings and improperly defined the meaning of the term “not unduly economically burdensome” as used in the 1996 Act . In addition, some ILECs argued that the FCC’s forward-looking TELRIC pricing methodology does not allow adequate compensation for the provision of UNEs. On July18, 2000, in Iowa Utilities Board, et al. v. Federal Communications Commission 219 F.3d 744 (8th Cir. 2000) (“Iowa II”), the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals ordered some of these FCC rules to be vacated on the grounds they were inconsistent with the 1996 Act . The Eighth Circuit said the FCC’s rural exemption rules were contrary to the plain language of the 1996 Act . On March5, 2001, the ACS Group’s rural LECs petitioned the FCC to adopt a new national rule consistent with the Iowa II decision, placing the burden of proof on CLECs in proceedings to terminate a company’s rural exemption . On August27, 2001, the FCC denied the petition, explaining it was unnecessary as the FCC is already bound by the Iowa II decision . The ACS Group rural companies requested reconsideration of that decision on September26, 2001 and the matter is still pending. As to the FCC’s TELRIC pricing methodology, the Eighth Circuit in Iowa II upheld the use of a forward-looking economic model but vacated the FCC’s rule requiring the pricing model to assume a hypothetical network based upon the most efficient technology currently available and the lowest cost network configuration. On September22, 2000, the Eighth Circuit stayed that portion of its mandate which vacated the FCC hypothetical network rule (set out at 47 C.F.R. 51.505(b)(1)) . This suspension was ordered by the Court to 19 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents permit parties to the proceeding to seek review of its Iowa II decision by the U.S. Supreme Court . On January22, 2001, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari to review the Eighth Circuit’s decision requiring the FCC to vacate its hypothetical network rule. The Eighth Circuit did not suspend other portions of its decision, including those portions vacating FCC rules addressing the “rural exemption” provisions of 47 U.S.C. 251(f)(1), and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review the Eighth Circuit’s rural exemption decision. On May13, 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the FCC’s TELRIC regulations in Verizon Communications, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, 535 U.S. 467 (2002) In November, 1999, the FCC issued an order addressing the issues the Supreme Court remanded in Iowa I. In May, 2002, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit held that the FCC again had improperly applied the statutory unbundling standard, and remanded the unbundling rules to the FCC for further consideration. In February, 2003, the FCC adopted a further order governing the network elements that an ILEC must unbundle, and delegating significant authority to make such determinations to state public utility commissions. The FCC’s order is likely to be the subject of further appeals. The 1996 Act also specifies that resale and UNE rates are to be negotiated among the parties, or, if the parties fail to reach an agreement, arbitrated by the relevant state regulatory commission. Once the parties have come to agreement, the proposed rates are subject to final approval by the state regulatory commission . In January 1997, ACSA’s predecessor, ATU, entered into an interconnection agreement with GCI, which provides for resale and UNE interconnection, and with ATT Alascom, which provides for resale interconnection. Neither interconnection agreement contained a defined term or a termination date. Near the end of 1999, the Company notified GCI and ATT of its view that the interconnection agreements pertaining to ACSA had reached the end of a reasonable period of availability . In January of 2000, the Company filed a motion with the RCA to reopen the original GCI arbitration proceedings involving ACSA for the purpose of establishing an appropriate forward looking cost model and the re-pricing various interconnection services and UNEs in the Anchorage market. The RCA subsequently granted the essence of the Company’s motion and has reopened the docket for such purposes. No action was taken in 2000 . On October25, 2001, the RCA granted ACSA an interim UNE rate increase of $1.07, bringing the UNE rate up from $13.85 to $14.92 . At present time there is no schedule for the RCA to complete its adjudication of Anchorage UNE rates. Certain of ACS Group’s local operating utilities, ACSAK, ACSN, and ACSF, are defined as “rural telephone companies” under the 1996 Act. As rural telephone companies, they were granted rural exemptions from the requirements relating to both resale interconnection and UNE interconnection. The rural exemptions were to continue until the APUC or the RCA determined that interconnection was technically feasible, not unduly economically burdensome and consistent with the 1996 Act’s universal service provisions. On June30, 1999, the APUC issued an order terminating the rural exemptions of ACSN, ACSAK and ACSF. On October11, 1999, the RCA affirmed the APUC’s order. As a result, these rural LECs are no longer exempt from the 1996 Act’s interconnection requirements applicable to ILECs, and the Company’s competitors immediately requested interconnection agreements. On November10, 1999, the Company filed a formal appeal of the RCA’s order terminating the rural exemptions in the Alaska Superior Court. The issues in the case were fully briefed during the year 2000 . The court denied the Company’s request to stay the RCA’s order terminating the rural exemptions on February9, 2001 and subsequently upheld the RCA’s orders on November26, 2001 . The Company filed an appeal with the Alaska Supreme Court on December26, 2001 and the Court heard oral argument in the matter on February11, 2003 . Although ACS Group believes that the appeals are well founded, it cannot predict the timing and outcome of this litigation. Subsequent to terminating the rural exemptions for the Fairbanks, Juneau-Douglas and ACSN’s Glacier State study area markets, the Company entered into unsuccessful negotiations for interconnection agreements with GCI . Interconnection issues, including the pricing for UNEs, were subject to an RCA arbitration during the year 2000 . On September5, 2000, the RCA issued orders largely ratifying the findings of the arbiter in these 20 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents interconnection arbitration proceedings involving the Company and GCI . On September25, 2000, the Company filed a protective appeal in the State Superior Court and a complaint in the Federal District Court for the District of Alaska, alleging various errors in the RCA orders . On October5, 2000, the RCA issued final orders affirming the interconnection agreements arbitrated in these proceedings. The RCA also sought to dismiss the claims against it on the basis of sovereign immunity, and when its request was denied, it appealed the issue to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. The Ninth Circuit has yet to render a decision on the RCA’s sovereign immunity claims. No court has ever ruled on the merits of ACS’ claims. Although ACS Group believes that its appeal and complaint are well founded, it cannot predict the timing and outcome of this litigation. The Company has and will continue to vigorously defend its proposed cost models and interconnection charges but it cannot be certain that it will be able to charge rates that provide fair compensation for providing UNEs and/or schedule discounted resale services . Since 1999, the Company has also entered into interconnection agreements with Alaska Fiber Star, LLC, TelAlaska Long Distance, Inc., Level 3, and other entities. The rural exemption previously enjoyed by ACS Group’s ACSF, ACSAK and ACSN have been lifted by the RCA, with the exception of the Company’s Sitka study area within ACSN. The loss of the rural exemptions, absent compensating measures, such as rate increases or market structure reforms, including the replacement of implicit subsidies by explicit support mechanisms, rate deaveraging, or regulatory flexibility, could adversely affect the Company’s operating results. Promotion of Universal Service While the 1996 Act promoted Congress’ policy of ensuring that affordable service is provided to consumers universally in rural, high-cost areas of the country, the 1996 Act altered the framework for providing universal service by: • providing for the identification of those services eligible for universal service support, • requiring the FCC to make implicit subsidies explicit, • expanding the types of communications carriers required to pay universal service contributions and • allowing CLECs to be eligible for funding. These and other provisions were intended to make provision of universal service support compatible with a competitive market . Pursuant to the 1996 Act, federal USF payments are only available to carriers that are designated as eligible telecommunications carriers by a state public utilities commission . In areas served by rural LECs, the 1996 Act provides that a state public utilities commission may designate more than one eligible telecommunications carrier, in addition to the ILEC, only after determining that the designation of an additional eligible telecommunications carrier is consistent with the public interest. As a result, an incumbent rural LEC has an opportunity to maintain its status as the sole recipient of federal USF payments in its service area, even if it is subsequently subjected to competition. The RCA, however, has granted GCI’s request that it be designated an eligible telecommunications carrier in Fairbanks, Juneau, and Fort Wainwright, all of which are currently served by the Company’s subsidiaries. The addition of a second eligible telecommunications carrier in the service areas of ACS Group’s properties could have the effect of reducing the amount of funds available from the federal USF and could materially adversely affect the Company’s ability to achieve a reasonable rate of return on the capital invested in its network . Rules for rural telephone companies are still being developed by the FCC, in consultation with a Federal-State Joint Board on Universal Service (“Joint Board”) . The RCA Chairman is a member of this Joint Board, and the Company’s remaining LEC subsidiaries are rural telephone companies as defined in the 1996 Act . On May23, 2001, after considering recommendations from the Joint Board and a Rural Task Force formed to study universal service issues, the FCC issued rules that, for an interim period of five years, will: (1)increase 21 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents the overall funding of the universal service support fund for high-cost rural carriers; (2) permit disaggregation of universal service support so that greater amounts of support would be targeted to the highest-cost areas the rural carrier serves; and (3)create additional support for significant investments in rural telecommunications plant and equipment . Because the operating subsidiary companies of ACS Group provide interstate and international services, they are required to contribute to the federal USF a percentage of their revenue earned from their interstate and international services. Although the Company’s rural LECs receive subsidies from the federal USF, they cannot be certain of how, in the future, the Company’s contributions to the fund will compare to the subsidies they receive from the fund . FCC Regulation of Wireless Services The FCC regulates the licensing, construction, operation, acquisition and sale of personal communications services and cellular systems in the United States. All cellular and personal communications services licenses have a 10-year term, at the end of which they must be renewed. Licenses may be revoked for cause, and license renewal applications may be denied if the FCC determines that renewal would not serve the public interest. In addition, all personal communications services licensees must satisfy certain coverage requirements. Licensees that fail to meet the coverage requirements may be subject to forfeiture of the license. The FCC has restricted the amount of wireless spectrum that a single entity may hold in a market . The FCC’s rule prohibited an entity from holding more than 55 MHz of spectrum in any particular market, however, this rule did sunset on January1, 2003 . The Communications Act preempts state and local regulation of the entry of, or the rates charged by, any provider of Commercial Mobile Radio Service (“CMRS”) which includes personal communications services and cellular services and the FCC does not regulate such rates. The FCC imposes, however, a variety of additional regulatory requirements on CMRS operators . For example CMRS operators must be able to transmit 911 calls from any qualified handset without credit check or validation, are required to provide the location of the 911 caller, within an increasingly narrow geographic tolerance over time, and in the future, will be required to provide 911 service for individuals with speech and hearing disabilities. FCC Regulation of Interstate Long Distance Services The Company’s interstate long distance services are currently not subject to rate regulation by the FCC, and the Company is not required to obtain FCC authorization for the installation, acquisition or replacement of its domestic interexchange network facilities. However, the Company must comply with the requirements of common carriage under the Communications Act. ACSLD is subject to the general requirement that its charges and terms for its telecommunications services be “just and reasonable” and that it not make any “unjust or unreasonable discrimination” in its charges or terms, as well as to a number of other requirements of the Communications Act and the FCC’s rules. The FCC has jurisdiction to act upon complaints against any common carrier for failure to comply with its statutory obligations, and it has recently levied substantial fines on carriers that have engaged in “slamming,” which is the industry term for unauthorized switching of a customer’s telecommunications service provider . In 1996, the FCC issued an order that required nondominant interexchange carriers, like ACSLD, to cease filing tariffs for its domestic interexchange services. The order required mandatory detariffing and gave carriers nine months to withdraw federal tariffs and move into contractual relationships with their customers. This order subsequently was upheld by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit . As a result, all interstate interexchange carriers, including ACSLD, were required to detariff contract-type interstate, interexchange services by January31, 2001, and were required to detariff interstate consumer long distance services by April30, 2001 . These rules also require ACSLD to post the rates, terms, and conditions of its service on its Internet web site, and engage in other public disclosure activities. The FCC has recently 22 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents adopted rules that require nondominant international carriers to detariff international services . ACSLD timely complied with these FCC requirements. FCC Policy on Internet Services The 1996 Act establishes a distinction between telecommunications services, which are regulated by the FCC, and information services, which remain unregulated. ACS Group’s Internet services are considered information services and are not regulated by the FCC. Because the regulatory boundaries in this area are somewhat unclear and subject to dispute, however, the FCC could seek to characterize some of the Company’s information services as “telecommunications services.” If that happens, those services would become subject to FCC regulations. The impact of a reclassification of ACS Group’s Internet services is difficult to predict. In June 2000, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that ATT’s high-speed Internet access service, delivered using cable television facilities, constituted both a “telecommunications” and an “information” service . In response to this holding, in September 2000, the FCC launched a proceeding to examine whether providers of high-speed Internet access over such cable facilities should be required to provide “open access” to their facilities to competing Internet service providers on a nondiscriminatory basis . If the FCC implements such a requirement, the Company may be able to supplement its own high-speed Internet access offerings by obtaining access to GCI’s high-speed Internet access cable lines for its own Internet service provider. Other Regulatory Proceedings In addition to the foregoing matters, a number of other FCC, state and judicial proceedings are currently pending or may be initiated in the future which could materially affect the Company’s business. The Company cannot predict the outcome of these proceedings before the FCC, the RCA or the courts. Environmental Regulations ACS Group’s operations are subject to federal, state and local laws and regulations governing the use, storage, disposal of, and exposure to, hazardous materials, the release of pollutants into the environment and the remediation of contamination. As an owner or operator of property and a generator of hazardous wastes, the Company could be subject to environmental laws that impose liability for the entire cost of cleanup at contaminated sites, regardless of fault or the lawfulness of the activity that resulted in contamination. The Company believes, however, that its operations are in substantial compliance with applicable environmental laws and regulations. Many of ACS Group’s properties formerly contained, or currently contain, underground and above ground storage tanks used for the storage of fuel or wastes. Some of these tanks have leaked. The Company believes that known contamination caused by these leaks has been, or is being, investigated or remediated. The Company cannot be sure, however, that it has discovered all contamination or that the regulatory authorities will not request additional remediation at sites that have previously undergone remediation. ACS Group’s wireless and television operations are also subject to regulations and guidelines that impose a variety of operational requirements relating to radio frequency emissions. The potential connection between radio frequency emissions and negative health effects, including some forms of cancer, has been the subject of substantial study by the scientific community in recent years. To date, the results of these studies have been inconclusive. Although the Company has not been named in any lawsuits alleging damages from radio frequency emissions, it is possible it could be in the future, particularly if scientific studies conclusively determine that radio frequency emissions are harmful. 23 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Item2. Properties At December31, 2002, ACS Group’s telecommunications network includes over 640 sheath miles of fiber optic cable, over 188 switching facilities and a statewide wireless network. In addition, the Company purchased fiber capacity in May of 1999 and in January of 2001 for high-speed links within Alaska and for termination of traffic in the lower 49 states. The Company plans to continue enhancing its network to meet customer demand for increased bandwidth and advanced services . See “Business — Network Facilities.” Local Telephone. ACS Group’s primary local telephone properties consist of 188 switching facilities. The Company owns most of its administrative and maintenance facilities, customer service center, central office and remote switching platforms and transport and distribution network facilities. The Company’s local telephone assets are located in Alaska . ACS Group’s transport and distribution network facilities include a fiber optic backbone and copper wire distribution facilities that connect customers to remote switch locations or to the central office and to points of presence or interconnection with interexchange carriers. These facilities are located on land pursuant to permits, easements, right of ways or other agreements. Wireless. ACS Group has four digital switching centers, 111 cell sites and three repeaters covering substantially all major population centers and highway corridors in Alaska plus one analog switch and cell site covering Barrow, Alaska. In most cases, the Company leases the land on which these sites are located. Internet. ACS Group has point of presence facilities in over 34 communities serving the majority of Alaska’s populated areas . These communities are linked over both owned and leased facilities to the Internet at Seattle, Washington. Interexchange. ACS Group is a facilities based interexchange carrier . The Company has invested in fiber optic capacity through an indefeasible right of use that provides bandwidth between the Company’s Anchorage, Fairbanks, and Juneau locations and Seattle, Washington . The Company also leases transport facilities and has arrangements with other interexchange carriers to terminate traffic in the lower 49 states. Substantially all of the Company’s assets (including those of its subsidiaries) are pledged as collateral for its senior obligations . See Note 7 “Long-term Obligations” to the Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. Consolidated Financial Statements for further discussion. Item3. Legal Proceedings The Company is involved in various claims, legal actions and regulatory proceedings arising in the ordinary course of business . In the opinion of management, the ultimate disposition of these matters will not have a material adverse effect on the Company’s consolidated financial position, results of operations or cash flows. Some of the legal proceedings involving regulatory matters are described under “Business — Regulation.” In addition, a class action lawsuit was filed against the Company on March14, 2001 . The litigation alleges various contract and tort claims concerning the Company’s decision to terminate its Infinite Minutes long distance plan . Although the Company believes this suit is without merit and intends to vigorously defend its position, it is impossible to determine at this time the actual number of plaintiffs or the claims that will actually continue to be in dispute. Item4. Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders There were no matters submitted to a vote of security holders during the fourth quarter of 2002. 24 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents PART II Item5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity and Related Stockholder Matters ACS Group’s common stock, $.01 par value, was first listed on the NASDAQ National Market on November18, 1999 under the symbol “ALSK.” Prior to November18, 1999, there was no public market for ACS Group’s Common Stock . The following table sets forth quarterly market price ranges for ACS Group’s Common Stock in 2002 and 2001: 2002 Quarters High Low 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 2001 Quarters 1st 2nd 3rd 4th $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ 8.28 $ 7.30 7.60 $ 3.71 4.86 $ 1.55 2.53 $ 1.63 High 7.38 $ Low 4.53 9.81 $ 4.06 9.26 $ 6.50 8.22 $ 6.50 The approximate number of holders of record of Common Stock as of March3, 2003 was 38 . Management believes that actual holders exceed 1,000, including those held in the broker/dealers name on behalf of their clients. Dividends ACS Group has never declared or paid any cash dividends on its common stock. The Company intends to retain its earnings, if any, to finance the development and expansion of its business, and, therefore, it does not anticipate paying any cash dividends in the foreseeable future. Moreover, the Company’s ability to declare and pay cash dividends on its common stock is restricted by covenants in its bank credit agreement and in the indentures governing its senior discount debentures and senior subordinated notes. Securities Authorized for Issuance Under Equity Compensation Plans Number of securities to be issued upon exercise of outstanding Weighted-average exercise price of outstanding options, warrants options, warrants and rights (a) and rights (b) Number of securities remaining available under future issuance under equity compensation plans (excluding securities reflected in column(a)) (c) 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Equity compensation plans not approved by security holders 3,373,712 $ 7.52 1,767,685 The number of securities remaining available for future issuance under equity compensation plans includes 1,767,685 shares under the Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 1999 Stock Incentive Plan, 39,907 under the ACS Group, Inc. 1999 Non-Employee Director Stock Compensation Plan, and 632,309 under the Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 1999 Employee Stock Purchase Plan. See Note 14 “Stock 25 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Incentive Plans” to the Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. Consolidated Financial Statements for further information on the Company’s equity compensation plans. Stock Offerings On December3, 1999 the Company registered 6,021,489 shares under various employee and non-employee stock option plans and an employee stock purchase plan (File # 333-92091) on FormS-8 under the Securities Act of 1933. As of March3, 2003, 3,365,462 option grants are outstanding under the employee stock option plans and 441,305 options have been exercised and converted into shares of the Company’s common stock. As of March3, 2003, 110,093 shares have been awarded under the non-employee stock plan, of which 55,846 were elected to be deferred. As of March3, 2003, 367,693 shares have been issued under the employee stock purchase plan. See Note 14, “Stock Incentive Plans” to the Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. Consolidated Financial Statements for further discussion. Item6. Selected Financial Data SELECTED HISTORICAL FINANCIAL DATA The following table sets forth selected historical condensed consolidated financial data of ACS Group. Consider the following points in connection with the table: • • • • Effective January1, 2002, the Company adopted SFAS No.142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets. Upon adoption and completion of the analysis required under SFAS No, 142, a transitional impairment loss of $105,350 was recognized as the cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle in the first quarter of 2002. The Company performed its required annual goodwill impairment test as of October1, 2002 and recognized an impairment loss of $64.8million in operating expenses for the year ended December31, 2002. On March30, 2002, the Company approved a plan to sell its wireless cable television service segment. As a result of this decision, the operating revenue and expense of this segment has been classified as discontinued operations for all periods presented. Certain reclassifications have been made to the 2001 and 2000 financial statements to make them conform to the current year’s presentation. The selected historical consolidated operating data for the year ended December31, 1999 represents the consolidated results of ACS Group from May15, 1999 through December31, 1999. Certain reclassifications have been made to the 1999 consolidated operations to conform to the current presentation of ACS Group’s consolidated operations. The selected historical consolidated financial data below should be read in conjunction with “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” and the audited consolidated financial statements of ACS Group and the related notes . See Index to Consolidated Financial Statements and Schedule which appears on page F-1 hereof. 26 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Operating Data: Operating revenues Operating expenses Operating income (loss) Other income (expense) ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES For the Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001, 2000, and 1999 (dollars in thousands, except per share amounts) 2002 2001 2000 1999 $ 343,502 $ 332,215 $ 313,527 $ 192,786 366,266 (22,764 ) (49,501 ) 285,092 47,123 (56,838 ) 279,759 33,768 (58,253 ) 176,207 16,579 (38,785 ) (72,265 ) (9,715 ) (24,485 ) (22,206 ) — (72,265 ) 195 (9,520 ) 197 (24,288 ) 301 (21,905 ) Loss before income taxes, discontinued operations, extraordinary item and cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Income tax benefit Loss from continuing operations Loss from discontinued operations (7,632 ) (1,718 ) (917 ) (306 ) Extraordinary item — early extinguishment of debt Loss before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle — (79,897 ) — (11,238 ) — (25,205 ) (3,267 ) (25,478 ) Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net loss Loss per share — basic and diluted: Loss from continuing operations $ $ (105,350 ) (185,247 ) $ — (11,238 ) $ — (25,205 ) $ — (25,478 ) (2.30 ) $ (0.30 ) $ (0.74 ) $ (0.94 ) Loss from discontinued operations (0.24 ) (0.05 ) (0.03 ) (0.01 ) Extraordinary item Loss before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net loss — (2.54 ) — (0.36 ) — (0.77 ) (0.14 ) (1.09 ) (3.35 ) — — — $ (5.89 ) $ (0.36 ) $ (0.77 ) $ (1.09 ) Weighted average shares outstanding: Balance Sheet Data (end of period) Basic Diluted Total assets Other Financial Data: Long-term debt including current portion Stockholders’ equity 31,464 31,474 31,523 31,523 32,654 32,654 23,396 23,396 $ 701,620 $ 901,514 $ 908,285 $ 934,443 607,763 611,250 614,004 612,756 8 191,687 215,380 247,968 Cash provided by operating activities $ 64,827 $ 75,263 $ 48,493 $ 44,033 Cash used by investing activities (78,571 ) (94,483 ) (74,699 ) (774,653 ) Cash provided (used)by financing activities Capital expenditures (8,703 ) (1,664 ) (13,892 ) 832,614 71,464 87,582 72,253 74,828 27 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents SELECTED HISTORICAL FINANCIAL DATA—ATU AND CENTURYTEL’S ALASKA PROPERTIES The following table sets forth selected historical combined financial data of CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties and ATU for the year ended December31, 1998 and as of December31, 1998 (dollars in thousands). The Company derived the selected historical combined financial data for CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties from the audited combined financial statements and the related notes of CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties and is presented on CenturyTel’s basis of accounting. ACS Group derived the selected historical financial data for ATU from the audited financial statements and the related notes of ATU. Consider the following points for ATU in connection with the table: • “Other income (expense)” includes the equity in earnings (losses) from minority investments. • • During the periods presented, ATU was a public utility of the Municipality of Anchorage and was exempt from federal and state taxes on income. Net cash data includes information from ATU financial statements prepared in accordance with governmental accounting standards. Under Governmental Accounting Standards Board (“GASB”) Statement No.20, Accounting And Financial Reporting For Proprietary Funds And Other Governmental Entities That Use Proprietary Fund Accounting , ATU applied all applicable GASB pronouncements and all Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) Statements and Interpretations, Accounting Principles, Board Opinions and Accounting Research Bulletins, unless they conflict with or contradict GASB pronouncements . ATU followed the provisions of GASB Statement No.27 to account for pension and post-retirement costs, which differs from FASB Statement No.87 and FASB Statement No.106 regarding the methodology for calculation of such costs and how they are recorded and disclosed. It is not practicable to quantify the differences between the statements without an additional complete actuarial valuation because the actuarial calculations for FASB Statement No.87 purposes require different assumptions and represent different measurement basis. Other differences between GASB and FASB have been evaluated and have been determined not to be material for the periods presented. Operating Data: Operating revenues Operating expenses Operating income Other income (expense) Income before income taxes Income taxes Net income Balance Sheet Data (end of period): Total assets Long-term debt including current portion Stockholders’ equity Other Financial Data: Cash provided by operating activities CenturyTel's Alaska Properties ATU $ 157,097 $ 124,509 134,204 22,893 (9,323 ) 104,595 19,914 (1,049 ) 13,570 — 13,570 $ 18,865 9,218 9,647 $ $ 350,245 $ 472,660 172,521 141,884 43,408 400,962 $ 53,207 $ 38,291 Cash used by investing activities (5,659 ) (26,664 ) Cash used by financing activities (33,580 ) (3,770 ) Capital expenditures 29,644 26,799 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. 28 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Item7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations Forward Looking Statements and Analysts’ Reports This Form10-K and future filings by the Company on Forms 10-K, 10-Q and 8-K and future oral and written statements by the Company and its management may include, certain “forward-looking statements” as defined under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including (without limitation) statements with respect to anticipated future operating and financial performance, financial position and liquidity, growth opportunities and growth rates, pricing plans, acquisition and divestitive opportunities, business prospects, strategic alternatives, business strategies, regulatory and competitive outlook, investment and expenditure plans, financing needs and availability, and other similar forecasts and statements of expectation. Words such as “aims,” “anticipates,” “believes,” “could,” “estimates,” “expects,” “hopes,” “intends,” “may,” “plans,” “projects,” “seeks,” “should,” and “will,” and variations of these words and similar expressions, are intended to identify these forward-looking statements. These forward looking statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from our Company’s historical experience and our present expectations or projections . Forward-looking statements by the Company and its management are based on estimates, projections, beliefs and assumptions of management and are not guarantees of future performance. The Company disclaims any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement based on the occurrence of future events, the receipt of new information, or otherwise. Actual future performance, outcomes and results may differ materially from those expressed in forward-looking statements made by the Company and its management as a result of a number of important factors. Examples of these factors include (without limitation ) rapid technological developments and changes in the telecommunications industries; ongoing deregulation (and the resulting likelihood of significantly increased price and product/service competition) in the telecommunications industry as a result of the 1996 Act and other similar federal and state legislation and the federal and state rules and regulations enacted pursuant to that legislation; regulatory limitations on the Company’s ability to change its pricing for communications services; the possible future unavailability of SFAS No.71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation, to the Company’s wireline subsidiaries; and possible changes in the demand for the Company’s products and services. In addition to these factors, actual future performance, outcomes and results may differ materially because of other, more general, factors including (without limitation) changes in general industry and market conditions and growth rates; changes in interest rates or other general national, regional or local economic conditions; governmental and public policy changes; changes in accounting policies or practices adopted voluntarily or as required by accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America; and the continued availability of financing in the amounts, at the terms and on the conditions necessary to support the Company’s future business. Investors should also be aware that while ACS Group does, at various times, communicate with securities analysts, it is against the Company’s policy to disclose to them any material non-public information or other confidential information . Accordingly, investors should not assume that ACS Group agrees with any statement or report issued by an analyst irrespective of the content of the statement or report. To the extent that reports issued by securities analysts contain any projections, forecasts or opinions, such reports are not the responsibility of ACS Group. 29 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Introduction This discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and related notes and the other financial information included elsewhere in this Form10-K. Alaska Communications Systems Group ACS Group was formed in 1998 by Fox Paine Company, members of the former senior management team of Pacific Telecom, Inc., and other experienced telecommunications industry executives. In May 1999, the Company acquired CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties and Anchorage Telephone Utility or ATU . CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties were the incumbent provider of local telephone services in Juneau, Fairbanks and more than 70 rural communities in Alaska and provided Internet services to customers statewide. CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties included ACS of Fairbanks, Inc., ACS of Alaska, Inc., and ACS of the Northland, Inc. ATU was the largest LEC in Alaska and provided local telephone and long distance services primarily in Anchorage and wireless services statewide. ATU provided long distance services through ATU Long Distance, Inc. and wireless services through MACtel, Inc . These companies are now known as ACS of Anchorage, Inc., ACS Long Distance, Inc. and ACS Wireless, Inc. On October 29, 1999, the Company changed its name from ALEC Holdings, Inc. to Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. On January1, 2001, the Company established ACS InfoSource, Inc. as a separate operation and transferred to it the Company’s yellow pages directory advertising business and assets which were previously included as a component of four different local telephone exchange carriers operating in Alaska which are also wholly-owned subsidiaries of the Company. The consolidated financial statements for ACS Group represent the operations principally of the following entities: Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. • Alaska Communications Systems Holdings, Inc. • ACS of Alaska, Inc. • ACS of the Northland, Inc. • ACS of Fairbanks, Inc. • ACS of Anchorage, Inc. • ACS Wireless, Inc. • ACS Long Distance, Inc. • ACS Television, L.L.C. • ACS Internet, Inc. • ACS InfoSource, Inc. • Prior to the consummation of the acquisitions of CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties and ATU in May 1999, ACS Group had no operations. Today, ACS Group generates revenue primarily through: • the provision of local telephone services, including: • basic local service to retail customers within ACS Group’s service areas, • wholesale service to CLECs, 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. • network access services to interexchange carriers for origination and termination of interstate and intrastate long distance phone calls, • enhanced services, • ancillary services, such as BC, and • universal service payments; the provision of wireless services; • • the provision of yellow pages directory advertising; 30 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents • the provision of Internet services; and • the provision of interexchange network long-distance and data services. ACS Group also recognizes its proportionate share of the net income or loss of its minority-owned investments. Within the telecommunications industry, LECs have historically enjoyed stable revenue and cash flow from local exchange operations resulting from the need for basic telecommunications services, the highly regulated nature of the telecommunications industry and, in the case of rural LECs, the underlying cost recovery settlement and support mechanisms applicable to local exchange operations. Basic local service is generally provided at a flat monthly rate and allows the user to place unlimited calls within a defined local calling area. Access revenues are generated by providing interexchange carriers access to the LEC’s local network and its customers . Universal service revenues are a subsidy paid to rural LECs to support the high cost of providing service in rural markets. Other service revenue is generated from ancillary services and enhanced services. Changes in revenue are largely attributable to changes in the number of access lines, local service rates and minutes of use. Other factors can also impact revenue, including: • intrastate and interstate revenue settlement methodologies, • authorized rates of return for regulated services, • whether an access line is used by a business or residential subscriber, • intrastate and interstate calling patterns, • customers’ selection of various local rate plan options, • selection of enhanced calling services, such as voice mail • other subscriber usage characteristics. LECs have three basic tiers of customers: • business and residential customers located in their local service areas that pay for local phone service, • interexchange carriers that pay for access to long distance calling customers located within its local service areas and • CLEC’s that pay for wholesale access to the Company’s network in order to provide competitive local service on either a wholesale or UNE basis as prescribed under the 1996 Act. LECs provide access service to numerous interexchange carriers and may also bill and collect long distance charges from interexchange carrier customers on behalf of the interexchange carriers. The amount of access charge revenue associated with a particular interexchange carrier varies depending upon long distance calling patterns and the relative market share of each long distance carrier. ACS Group’s local service rates for end users are authorized by the RCA. Authorized rates are set by the FCC and the RCA for interstate and intrastate access charges, respectively, and may change from time to time. Critical Accounting Policies and Accounting Estimates 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Management is responsible for the financial statements presented elsewhere in this 10-K and has evaluated the accounting policies used in their preparation . Management believes these policies to be reasonable and appropriate. The Company’s significant accounting policies are described in Note 1 in the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements elsewhere in this 10-K. The following discussion identifies those accounting policies that management believes are critical in the preparation of the Company’s financial statements, the 31 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents judgements and uncertainties affecting the application of those policies, and the possibility that materially different amounts would be reported under different conditions or using different assumptions. The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of commitments and contingencies at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Among the significant estimates affecting the financial statements are those related to the realizable value of accounts receivable, long-lived assets, income taxes and network access revenue reserves. Actual results may differ from those estimates . Access revenue is recognized when earned. The Company participates in toll revenue pools with other telephone companies. Such pools are funded by toll revenue and/or access charges regulated by the RCA within the intrastate jurisdiction and the FCC within the interstate jurisdiction. Much of the interstate access revenue is initially recorded based on estimates. These estimates are derived from interim financial statements, available separations studies and the most recent information available about achieved rates of return. These estimates are subject to adjustment in future accounting periods as additional operational information becomes available. To the extent that disputes arise over revenue settlements, the Company’s policy is to defer revenue collected until settlement methodologies are resolved and finalized. At December31, 2002, the Company had recorded liabilities of $20.5million related to its estimate of refundable access revenue. Actual results could vary from this estimate. The Company utilizes the liability method of accounting for income taxes . Under the liability method, deferred taxes reflect the temporary differences between the financial and tax bases of assets and liabilities using the enacted tax rates in effect in the years in which the differences are expected to reverse . Deferred tax assets are reduced by a valuation allowance to the extent that it is more likely than not that such deferred tax assets will not be realized. If the Company thought it was more likely than not that all of its deferred tax assets would be realized in future periods, the Company’s previously reported net losses for the three years ended December31, 2002 would decrease by up to $92.1million and its accumulated deficit would decrease from $247.2million to $155.1million. The local telephone exchange operations of the Company account for costs in accordance with the accounting principles for regulated enterprises prescribed by SFAS No.71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation. This accounting recognizes the economic effects of rate regulation by recording cost and a return on investment as such amounts are recovered through rates authorized by regulatory authorities. Accordingly, under SFAS No. 71, plant and equipment is depreciated over lives approved by regulators and certain costs and obligations are deferred based upon approvals received from regulators to permit recovery of such amounts in future years. Historically, lives approved for regulatory purposes have approximated economically useful lives. On July21, 2002, the Company received an order from the RCA which appears to extend lives approved for rate-making purposes beyond the economically useful lives of the underlying assets. Management petitioned for reconsideration, and the RCA has agreed to take additional testimony. A final order on the matter is not expected until the second quarter of 2003. As of December31, 2002 the Company has deferred as a regulatory asset $0.9million of costs incurred in connection with regulatory rate making proceedings, which will be amortized in future periods. If the Company were not following SFAS No. 71, these costs would have been charged to expense as incurred. Effective January1, 2002, the Company adopted SFAS No.142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets . In accordance with the guidelines of this accounting principle, goodwill and indefinite-lived intangible assets are no longer amortized but will be assessed for impairment on at least an annual basis. SFAS No.142 requires that goodwill be tested for impairment at the reporting unit level upon adoption and at least annually thereafter, utilizing a two-step methodology. The initial step requires the Company to determine the fair value of each reporting unit and compare it to the carrying value, including goodwill, of such unit. If the fair value exceeds the carrying value, no impairment loss would be recognized. However, if the carrying value of the reporting unit 32 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents for purposes of this test primarily by using a discounted cash flow valuation technique. Significant estimates used in the valuation include estimates of future cash flows, both future short-term and long-term growth rates, and estimated cost of capital for purposes of arriving at a discount factor. At December31, 2002, the Company had recorded goodwill of $77.2million and had recorded a transitional impairment loss of $105.4million and an impairment loss of $64.8million based on the annual impairment test. Results of Operations The following table summarizes ACS Group’s operations for the years ended December31, 2002, 2001, and 2000. Certain reclassifications have been made to 2001 and 2000 to conform to the current presentation of ACS Group’s consolidated operations. Operating revenues: Local telephone: Local network service Network access revenue Deregulated revenue and other $ Total local telephone Wireless Directory Internet Interexchange Operating expenses: Total operating revenues Local telephone Wireless Directory Internet Interexchange Unusual charges Depreciation and amortization Loss on disposal of assets, net Goodwill impairment loss Total operating expenses Operating income (loss) Other income and expense: Interest expense Interest income and other Equity in income (loss)of investments Total other income (expense) Loss before income taxes, discontinued operations and cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Income tax benefit Loss from continuing operations Loss from discontinued operations Loss before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net loss $ Year Ended December 31, 2002 2001 2000 (in thousands) 99,512 108,335 18,600 226,447 43,180 33,604 20,847 19,424 343,502 117,277 27,912 14,170 29,502 27,547 — 82,940 2,163 64,755 366,266 (22,764 ) (51,704 ) 2,203 — (49,501 ) (72,265 ) — (72,265 ) (7,632 ) (79,897 ) (105,350 ) (185,247 ) $ 96,270 102,977 22,164 221,411 41,894 33,870 13,724 21,316 332,215 120,465 25,649 14,684 15,677 29,509 — 79,108 — — 285,092 47,123 (60,157 ) 3,250 69 (56,838 ) (9,715 ) 195 (9,520 ) (1,718 ) (11,238 ) — $ 94,098 105,172 22,998 222,268 41,155 29,156 9,170 11,778 313,527 131,542 26,306 13,334 11,785 19,749 5,288 71,755 — — 279,759 33,768 (64,559 ) 6,609 (303 ) (58,253 ) (24,485 ) 197 (24,288 ) (917 ) (25,205 ) — $ (11,238 ) $ (25,205 ) 33 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Twelve Months Ended December31, 2002 Compared to Twelve Months Ended December31, 2001 Operating Revenues Operating revenues increased $11.3million, or 3.4%, for the year ended December31, 2002 compared to the year ended December31, 2001. Local telephone, wireless and Internet revenues increased compared to the prior period. Local Telephone Local telephone revenues, which consist of local network service, network access revenue, and deregulated revenues and other, increased $5.0million, or 2.3%, for the year ended December31, 2002 compared to the same period in 2001. The local network service component of local telephone revenues was $99.5 million during 2002 compared with $96.3million during 2001 . Revenue increased $3.2million or 3.4% from the prior year, while average access lines in service decreased 1.0% to 327,965. The increase in revenue is due to an increase of approximately $2.1million in additional feature, service order, directory assistance and wireless access revenue and approximately $1.1million of additional local private line revenue. The revenue increase from approximately $4.9million of rate increases for both retail and UNE local service rates implemented during the fourth quarter of 2001 at ACSA, as discussed below, was substantially offset by loss of retail market share to competition exacerbated by below cost UNE rates coupled with the Company’s promotion of discounted term contracts designed to defend market share. The Company believes it is earning less than its required rate of return for local network service in several of its markets and filed local service rate cases for all of its LEC businesses with the RCA on July2, 2001 aimed at making up this deficiency. Subsequently, in October 2001, the Company filed for interim and refundable local service rates in its Anchorage market in order to expedite a partial recovery of the total revenue deficiency. On November15, 2001 the RCA approved an interim and refundable rate increase for ACSA of 24% for certain services . This interim and refundable rate increase was implemented in November 2001 and generated approximately $4.2million in additional revenue in 2002. The Company expects the RCA to continue to hold hearings during 2003 and to adjudicate final local service rates during 2003 or 2004. The Company continued to experience loss of retail market share for local network service in its Anchorage, Fairbanks and Juneau service areas during the year. Generally, when the Company loses a retail local network service line to a competitor, it continues to provide the line to the competitor on a wholesale basis at reduced revenue per line. Management believes that the continuing loss of market share it has experienced in certain of its markets is partially attributable to below cost interconnection rates mandated by the RCA for UNEs. During the second quarter of 2001, the Company reopened interconnection proceedings for its Anchorage market and filed for an interim and refundable UNE rate increase of approximately $10 per month per loop. On October25, 2001, the RCA granted ACSA an interim and refundable UNE rate increase of $1.07, increasing the UNE rates from $13.85 to $14.92. The interim and refundable rate increase was implemented in November 2001 and generated approximately $0.7 million in additional revenue during 2002. The Company expects the RCA to hold hearings during 2003 and adjudicate final Anchorage UNE rates during 2003 or 2004. See “Business — Regulation” under Item1 of Part I of this report for further discussion. Network access revenues increased by $5.4million, or 5.2%, from $103.0 million in 2001 to $108.3million in 2002. Network access revenue is based on a regulated return on rate base and recovery of allowable expense associated with the origination and termination of toll calls for the Company’s retail and resale customers. During the second quarter of 2002, the Company recognized as revenue $11.1million of previously deferred interstate access revenue related to a dispute on interstate access rates for the Anchorage market based on a favorable ruling by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. After consideration of the revenue recognized as a result of the favorable ruling by the court, the decrease in network access revenue compared to the corresponding period in 2001 is due primarily to a shift from retail and wholesale lines to UNEs . 34 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Management expects that network access revenue will decline as a component of local telephone revenue for the foreseeable future. Deregulated and other revenues, which declined $3.6million, or 16.1% from 2001, consists principally of BC services, space and power rents, deregulated equipment sales, paystation revenues, regulated directory listing revenue, and other miscellaneous telephone revenues The decline in deregulated and other revenue was due primarily to a decrease in deregulated equipment sales of approximately $3.0million. CPE sales tend to fluctuate significantly from quarter to quarter and management believes they have also been impacted by recent economic concerns in the marketplace and technology alternatives. Wireless Wireless revenues increased $1.3million, or 3.1%, to $43.2million for the year ended December31, 2002 compared to $41.9million for the year ended December31, 2001 . This increase is due primarily to growth in average subscribers of 4.0% from 78,027 in 2001 to 81,170 in 2002. Average revenue per unit, or ARPU, decreased slightly from $44.74 in 2001 to $44.33 in 2002. Directory Although directory revenues decreased slightly to $33.6million in 2002 from $33.9million in 2001, the directory business continued its solid profitable performance. Management expects the growth in directory revenue to slow due to the recent economic uncertainty and its impacts on the advertising and publishing marketplace and as other advertising media, such as the Internet, compete for this business. Internet Internet revenues increased from $13.7million in 2001 to $20.8million in 2002 — an increase of $7.1million, or 51.9% . This increase is primarily due to revenue associated with the Company’s contract with the State of Alaska and growth in DSL subscribers of 71.8% from 7,041 in 2001 to 12,096 in 2002. Also contributing to the increase was the additional revenues resulting from the acquisition of MosquitoNet in July of 2001. On December10, 2001, the Company entered into a five year contract with the State of Alaska to provide a broad range of telecommunications services, many of which will be provided over an IP network and supported by a service center owned and operated by ACSI. Services under this contract began to be implemented during the second quarter of 2002. The Company anticipates revenue for this segment will increase in future periods as additional services are provisioned under the terms of the contract. The Company anticipates substantial capital investments of between $25million and $30million over the term of the contract to support the telecommunications needs of this customer, of which it has expended approximately $12.4million through December31, 2002. Interexchange Interexchange revenue decreased from $21.3million in 2001 to $19.4 million in 2002 — a decrease of $1.9million, or 8.9%. The decrease was due to a decline in long distance minutes of use from 219.6million in 2001 to 153.4 million in 2002. Long distance subscribers increased from 65,705 at December 31, 2001 to 70,000 at December31, 2002. The decline in minutes of use was due to the Company’s decision to terminate an unlimited $20 per month interstate calling plan in May of 2001, increased competition in the marketplace, and the popularity of discount long distance calling cards. Operating Expenses Operating expenses increased $81.2million, or 28.5%, from $285.1million for the year ended December31, 2001 to $366.3million for the year ended December31, 2002. 35 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Local Telephone The components of local telephone expense are plant specific operations, plant non-specific operations, customer operations, corporate operations and property and other operating tax expense . Depreciation and amortization associated with the operation of the local telephone segment is included in total depreciation and amortization. Local telephone expense decreased from $120.5million for the year ended December31, 2001 to $117.3million for the year ended December31, 2002 – a decrease of $3.2million or 2.6% . As a percentage of local telephone revenue, local telephone expense decreased from 54.4% for 2001 to 51.8% for 2002. These results reflect continued improvements in the Company’s cost structure, including workforce reductions and benefits derived from the deployment of information systems. Wireless Wireless expense increased $2.3million, or 8.8%, for the year ended December31, 2002 compared to the year ended December31, 2001. This increase is substantially due to an increase of minutes of use from 162.0million in 2001 to 196.8million in 2002. Directory Directory expense decreased $0.5million from $14.7million in 2001 to $14.2million in 2002. The decline in expenses is due to a decrease in costs of goods sold in 2002. Internet Internet expenses increased by $13.8million, or 88.2%. The increase in Internet expense was due principally to start-up expenses associated with commencing services under the State of Alaska telecommunications contract. On December10, 2001, the Company entered into a five year contract with the State of Alaska to provide a broad range of telecommunications services, many of which will be provided over an IP network and supported by a service center owned and operated by ACSI. The Company anticipates expense for this segment to level out or decline as it completes the integration of the State of Alaska services. Interexchange Interexchange expenses decreased by $2.0million, or 6.6%. The majority of this decrease was the result of the decline in long distance minutes of use as discussed under interexchange service revenue. Depreciation and Amortization Depreciation and amortization expense increased $3.8million, or 4.8%, due principally to increases in plant in service in 2002 and the adoption of shorter depreciable lives for certain classes of assets over the corresponding period of 2001, offset by ceasing goodwill amortization with the adoption of SFAS No.142, Goodwill and Intangible Assets on January1, 2002. Depreciation and amortization expense in 2001 included $7.7million of goodwill amortization. Under SFAS No.142, goodwill is no longer amortized but is instead subjected to an annual impairment test. Loss on disposal of assets The Company recorded a non-cash loss on disposal of assets of $2.2million during 2002 as a result of retiring certain assets no longer in use which were not fully depreciated at their retirement date. Goodwill impairment loss The Company recorded a non-cash goodwill impairment charge during the fourth quarter of 2002 of $64.8million as a result of its annual goodwill impairment test under SFAS No.142, Goodwill and Intangible 36 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Assets . See Note 5 “Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets” in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this 10-K for additional information. Interest Expense and Interest Income and other Interest expense decreased $8.5million, or 14.1%, for the year ended December31, 2002 compared to the year ended December31, 2001, principally as a result of market effects on the Company’s variable interest rate debt . In addition, during the second quarter of 2002, the Company reversed previously accrued interest expense of $1.7million as a result of a favorable ruling by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals related to a dispute on interstate access rates for the Anchorage market. Interest income and other also declined by $1.1million, or 32.2%, as a result of a lower average invested cash balance and lower market interest rates during 2002 compared to 2001. Income Taxes ACS Group has fully reserved the income tax benefit resulting from the consolidated losses it has incurred since May14, 1999 — the date of the acquisition of substantially all of its operations . Discontinued Operations On March30, 2002, the Company’s management approved a plan to offer for sale its wireless cable television service segment. As a result of this decision, the operating revenue and expense of this segment has been classified as discontinued operations under SFAS No.144, Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets, for all periods presented and the assets and liabilities of the disposal group have been written down to their fair value, net of expected selling expense. The write down and results of operations of this discontinued segment resulted in a charge to discontinued operations of $7.6million and $1.7million for the periods ended December31, 2002 and 2001, respectively. The Company has fully reserved in the form of a valuation allowance the income tax benefit of this discontinuance. Cumulative Effect of Change in Accounting Principle During the second quarter of fiscal 2002, the Company also completed the transitional review for goodwill impairment required under SFAS No.142, Goodwill and Intangible Assets . This review indicated that goodwill recorded in the local telephone, Internet and interexchange segments was impaired as of January1, 2002. Accordingly, the Company measured and recognized a transitional impairment loss of $105.4million as a cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle. See Note 5 “Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets” in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this 10-K for additional discussion of the impact of this statement on the Company’s consolidated financial statements. Net Loss The increase in net loss is primarily a result of the factors discussed above . Twelve Months Ended December31, 2001 Compared to Twelve Months Ended December31, 2000 Operating Revenues Operating revenues increased $18.7million, or 6.0%, for the year ended December31, 2001 compared to the year ended December31, 2000. Wireless, directory, Internet and interexchange revenues increased compared to the prior period. 37 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Local Telephone Local telephone revenues, which consist of local network service, network access revenue, and deregulated revenues and other, decreased $0.9million, or 0.4%, for the year ended December31, 2001 compared to the same period in 2000. The local network service component of local telephone revenues was $96.3 million during 2001 compared with $94.1million during 2000 . Revenue increased $2.2million or 2.3% from 2000, while average access lines in service increased 1.1% to 331,192. The net increase was due primarily to lower charges for uncollectible accounts as the Company improved its collection processes. The charges for uncollectible accounts recorded against local network service revenue in 2000 were $2.7million in excess of those recorded during 2001, accounting for more than 100% of the increase in local network service revenue. The Company continued to experience loss of retail market share for local network service in its Anchorage and Fairbanks service areas during 2001. Generally, when the Company loses a retail local network service line to a competitor, it continues to provide the line to the competitor on a wholesale basis at reduced revenue per line. Management believes that the continuing loss of market share it has experienced in certain of its markets is partially attributable to below cost interconnection rates mandated by the RCA for UNEs. During the second quarter of 2001, the Company reopened interconnection proceedings for its Anchorage market and filed for an interim and refundable UNE rate increase of approximately $10 per month per loop. On October25, 2001, the RCA granted ACSA an interim and refundable UNE rate increase of $1.07, bringing the UNE rate up from $13.85 to $14.92 . See “Business — Regulation” under Item1 of Part I of this report for further discussion. The Company believes it is also earning less than its required rate of return for local network service in several of its markets and filed local service rate cases for all of its LEC businesses with the RCA on July2, 2001 aimed at making up this deficiency. Subsequently, in October 2001, the Company filed for interim and refundable local service rates in its Anchorage market in order to expedite a partial recovery of the total revenue deficiency. On November15, 2001 the RCA approved an interim and refundable rate increase for ACSA of 24% for certain services . This interim and refundable rate increase is expected to generate approximately $4.0million in annual revenue requirement . See “Business — Regulation” under Item1 of Part I of this report for further discussion. Network access revenues decreased by $2.2million, or 2.1%, from $105.2 million in 2000 to $103.0million in 2001. Network access revenues are based on a regulated return on rate base and recovery of allowable expenses associated with the origination and termination of toll calls. The decrease in network access revenues from the corresponding period in 2000 is due primarily to changes relating to cost allocation factors, rate base, expenses and a shift from retail lines to UNEs as a result of competition, from period to period . Management expects that network access revenues will decline as a component of local telephone revenues for the foreseeable future. Deregulated and other revenues, which declined $0.8million, or 3.6% from 2000, consists principally of BC services, space and power rents, deregulated equipment sales, paystation revenues, regulated directory listing revenue, and other miscellaneous telephone revenues. The decline in deregulated and other revenue was due primarily to a $2.2million reduction in deregulated equipment sales in 2001 offset by a $1.2million increase in space and power rents over 2000. Wireless Wireless revenues increased $0.7million, or 1.8%, to $41.9million for the year ended December31, 2001 compared to $41.2million for the year ended December31, 2000 . This growth in revenue is due to growth in average wireless subscribers to 78,027 in 2001 from 74,501 in 2000, or 4.7%, and a decrease in average revenue per unit, or ARPU, from $46.03 in 2000 to $44.74 in 2001. The decrease in ARPU is the result of competitive digital statewide and national pricing programs implemented during 2001 that offer more minutes and free features than the previous plans for the same price, coupled with other sales promotions . These competitive plans have resulted in increased total revenues and market share but lower revenue per unit. 38 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Directory Directory revenues increased by $4.7million, or 16.2%, from $29.2million in 2000 to $33.9million in 2001. This growth reflects improved penetration and revenue per advertiser for the current directory phone book cycles compared with 2000. Management expects the growth in directory revenues to slow as competing directories and other advertising vehicles, such as the Internet, television and radio, compete for this business and the market matures. Internet Internet revenues increased from $9.2million in 2000 to $13.7million in 2001 — an increase of $4.5million, or 49.7% . This increase is primarily due to the additional revenues from Internet Alaska, Inc. (“IAI”), which was acquired in June of 2000 and MosquitoNet, which was acquired in July of 2001. Internet revenues were also favorably impacted by growth in DSL subscribers. On December10, 2001, the Company entered into a five year contract with the State of Alaska to provide a broad range of telecommunications services, many of which will be provided over an IP network or supported by a service center owned and operated by ACSI. Accordingly, the Company anticipates revenues for this segment will increase in future periods. Interexchange Interexchange revenues increased from $11.8million in 2000 to $21.3 million in 2001 — an increase of $9.5million, or 81.0%. The increase was due to growth in long distance subscribers from 57,537 in 2000 to 65,705 in 2001. The Company also experienced growth in long distance minutes of use from 95.3 million in 2000 to 219.6million in 2001. The growth in both subscribers and minutes of use was due to high customer acceptance of and satisfaction with the Company’s flat rate long distance product offerings, which it began rolling out in the fourth quarter of 2000. Operating Expenses Operating expenses increased $5.3million, or 1.9%, from $279.8million for the year ended December31, 2000 to $285.1million for the year ended December31, 2001. Operating expenses decreased as a percentage of operating revenues from 89.2% in 2000 to 85.8% in 2001. Local Telephone The components of local telephone expense are plant specific operations, plant non-specific operations, customer operations, corporate operations and property and other operating tax expense . Depreciation and amortization associated with the operation of the local telephone segment is included in total depreciation and amortization. Local telephone expense decreased from $131.5million for the year ended December31, 2000 to $120.5million for the year ended December31, 2001 – a decrease of $11.1million or 8.4% . As a percentage of local telephone revenue, local telephone expense decreased from 59.2% for 2000 to 54.4% for 2001. These results reflect continued improvements in the Company’s cost structure, including workforce reductions, benefits derived from the deployment of information systems, and other synergies realized through the consolidation of the operations the Company acquired in 1999. Wireless Wireless expense decreased $0.7million, or 2.5%, for the year ended December31, 2001 compared to the year ended December31, 2000. Wireless expense was 63.9% of wireless revenues for 2000 and 61.2% of wireless revenues for 2001. 39 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Directory Directory expenses increased $1.4million from $13.3million in 2000 to $14.7million in 2001. As a percent of directory revenue, expenses were 43.4% for 2001 compared to 45.7% for 2000. This margin improvement is due to stable fixed cost combined with increasing directory revenue. Internet Internet expenses increased by $3.9million, or 33.0%, and decreased as a percentage of revenue from 128.5% in 2000 to 114.2% in 2001. The increase in Internet expenses was due principally to the acquisition in June of 2000 of IAI and the acquisition in July, 2001 of MosquitoNet, for which comparable costs are not included for the full year of 2000. Costs associated with developing the Company’s statewide Internet infrastructure, preparation for providing services under the State of Alaska telecommunications contract, and the rollout of the Company’s DSL product also contributed to the increase in Internet expense. On December10, 2001, the Company entered into a five year contract with the State of Alaska to provide a broad range of telecommunications services, many of which will be provided over an IP network or supported by a service center owned and operated by ACSI. Accordingly, the Company anticipates expenses for this segment will increase in future periods. Interexchange Interexchange expenses increased by $9.8million, or 49.4%, and decreased as a percentage of revenue from 167.7% in 2000 to 138.4% in 2001. The majority of this increase was the result of additional traffic sensitive costs incurred as a result of the increase in customers and minutes of use with the rollout of the Company’s flat rate calling plans as discussed under interexchange service revenues. Unusual charges During the year ended December31, 2000, ACS Group recorded $5.3million of unusual charges, consisting of the write-off of approximately $1.5million of costs related to the attempted acquisition of Matanuska Telephone Association, $0.8million in a legal settlement and $3.0million related to severance and restructuring plans. Depreciation and Amortization Depreciation and amortization expense increased $7.4million, or 10.2%, due principally to increases in plant in service for the year ended December 31, 2001 over the corresponding period of 2000. Depreciation and amortization expense includes $7.7million of goodwill amortization for each of 2001 and 2000. The Company adopted on January1, 2002, SFAS No.142, Goodwill and Intangible Assets . Goodwill will no longer be amortized in 2002 and will instead be subjected to an annual impairment test. Interest Expense and Interest Income and other Interest expense decreased $4.4million, or 6.8%, for the year ended December31, 2001 compared to the year ended December31, 2000, principally as a result of market effects on the Company’s variable interest rate debt . Interest income and other also declined by $3.4million, or 50.8%, as a result of a lower average invested cash balance and lower market interest rates during 2001 compared to 2000. Income Taxes ACS Group has fully reserved the income tax benefit resulting from the consolidated losses it has incurred since May14, 1999 — the date of the acquisition of substantially all of its operations . 40 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Discontinued Operations On March30, 2002, the Company’s management approved a plan to offer for sale its wireless cable television service segment. As a result of this decision, the operating revenue and expense of this segment has been classified as discontinued operations under SFAS No.144, Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets, for all periods presented and the assets and liabilities of the disposal group were written down to their fair value, net of expected selling expense. The results of operations of this discontinued segment resulted in a charge to discontinued operations of $1.7million and $0.9million for the periods ended December31, 2001 and 2000, respectively. The Company has fully reserved in the form of a valuation allowance the income tax benefit of this discontinuance. Net Loss The decrease in net loss is primarily a result of the factors discussed above . Liquidity and Capital Resources ACS Group has satisfied its cash requirements for operations, capital expenditures and debt service primarily through internally generated funds, the sale of stock and debt financing. For the twelve months ended December31, 2002 the Company’s cash flows from operating activities were $64.8million. At December31, 2002, the Company had approximately $21.9million in net working capital, with approximately $18.6million represented by cash and cash equivalents and $3.4million by restricted cash. As of December31, 2002 the Company had $75.0million of remaining capacity under its revolving credit facility, representing 100% of available capacity. The Company has a $430.7million bank credit agreement (“Senior Credit Facility”), $150.0million in 9.375% senior subordinated notes due 2009 and $17.3million in 13% senior discount debentures due 2011, representing substantially all of the Company’s long-term debt of $607.8million as of December31, 2002 . Interest on ACS Group’s senior subordinated notes and senior discount debentures is payable semiannually . Interest on borrowings under the Senior Credit Facility is payable monthly, quarterly or semi-annually at the Company’s option. The Senior Credit Facility requires $4.4million in annual principal payments commencing on May14, 2002, with balloon payments in each of 2006, 2007, and 2008. The Senior Credit Facility contains a number of restrictive covenants and events of default, including covenants limiting capital expenditures, incurrence of debt, and the payment of dividends, and requires the Company to achieve certain financial ratios. The Company is in compliance with all of its debt covenants. See Note 7 “Long-term Obligations” in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements included elsewhere in this 10-K. During the second quarter of 2002, the Company’s lenders approved an amendment to its Senior Credit Facility that, among other things, permits the Company to repurchase up to $15million of its outstanding common stock over the term of the Senior Credit Facility. The Company employs an interest rate hedge transaction, which fixes at 5.99% the underlying variable rate on $217.5million of the borrowings under the Senior Credit Facility, expiring in June 2004. The underlying variable rate for the Senior Credit Facility is based on the one, three or six month London Interbank Offer Rate (“LIBOR”) at the Company’s option, which is adjusted at each rollover date. In December 2001, the Company entered into a material contract with the State of Alaska to provide it with comprehensive telecommunications services for a period of five years. This contract obligates the Company to, among other things, provide on the state’s behalf CPE and other capital assets which the Company believes will range between $25million and $30million over the term of the agreement, of which approximately $12.4million has been expended through December31, 2002. The Company intends to fund this commitment with cash on hand and cash flows from operations. 41 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents On July15, 2002 the Company fulfilled a commitment to Neptune Communications, L.L.C. (“Neptune”) to provide to that party a loan in the form of an unsecured note receivable totaling $15million in return for certain consideration. The note bears interest at the applicable federal rate, which was 5.61% at the date of issuance, and matures on July15, 2022. Interest is payable semiannually, but the borrower may elect to add the interest to the principal in lieu of cash payments. The commitment was funded with cash on hand. In connection with this note, Neptune has granted the Company an option to purchase certain network assets of Neptune, no later than January2, 2006, at a price equal to the then outstanding loan balance. The Company has also entered into a strategic agreement with Neptune for the life of the fiber optic cable system owned by Neptune. The significant provisions of this agreement are: i) purchase commitments by the Company for capacity in 2005 and 2007, the final price and quantity of which are subject to future events, ii) Neptune’s restoration of the Company’s traffic carried on another cable system, iii) and specific interconnection arrangements between the Company and Neptune, should the Company exercise its option to purchase certain network assets from Neptune. The Company is currently renegotiating the terms and conditions of this agreement and it is not possible to determine the ultimate outcome of these negotiations at this time. The following table summarizes the Company’s contractual obligations and commitments with quantifiable payment terms as of December31, 2002: Long-term debt Capital leases Operating leases Total contractual cash obligations Total 595,581 12,182 9,538 617,301 $ $ $ $ 2003 4,066 2004-2005 8,131 $ 1,583 2,474 8,123 2,620 3,302 $ 14,053 2006-2007 290,131 2,055 1,808 293,994 $ $ Thereafter 293,253 5,924 1,954 301,131 $ $ The local telephone network requires the timely maintenance of plant and infrastructure. The Company’s historical capital expenditures have been significant. The construction and geographic expansion of the Company’s wireless network has required significant capital. The implementation of the Company’s interexchange network and data services strategy is also capital intensive. In 1999, the Company purchased fiber capacity for $19.5million, which was funded with monies borrowed to finance the 1999 acquisitions. Capital expenditures for 2000 were $72.3million, including $3.2million in capital leases. Capital expenditures for 2001 were $87.6million, including $19.5 million for additional fiber capacity and $15.0million for an IP based network and service center. Capital expenditures for 2002 were $71.4million, including 4.2million in capital leases, approximately $12.4million necessary to meet its obligations under a contract with the State of Alaska and approximately $5.0million for the first phase of its buildout of PCS licenses. The Company anticipates capital spending of between $60million and $65million for 2003. The Company intends to fund its future capital expenditures with cash on hand, through internally generated cash flows, and if necessary, through borrowings under the revolving credit facility . The Company has been authorized by its Board of Directors to evaluate the possible disposition of its directory business, ACSIS. This transaction, if completed, would result in a de-leveraging of the Company’s balance sheet and generate cash for other corporate objectives. The Company expects to file on or about March6, 2003, a preliminary prospectus with Canadian securities regulators relating to a proposed public offering in Canada of ACSIS through a Canadian income fund. Any prospective sale of ACSIS is subject to the approval of the Company’s Board of Directors, which is dependent upon terms and pricing. Any such sale is also contingent upon a number of conditions including approval by securities regulators, the approval of an amendment of certain terms and conditions of the Company’s senior credit facility and market conditions. There can be no assurance that the Company will consummate any transaction to sell ACSIS. The Company’s capital requirements may change due to, among other things: impacts of regulatory decisions that affect the Company’s ability to recover its investments, changes in technology, the effects of competition, changes in the Company’s business strategy, and the Company’s decision to pursue specific acquisition opportunities. The Company believes that it will have sufficient working capital provided by operations and available borrowing capacity under the existing revolving credit facility to service its debt and fund its operations, capital 42 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents expenditures and other obligations over the next 12months . The Company’s ability to service its debt and fund its operations, capital expenditures and other obligations will be dependent upon its future financial performance, which is, in turn, subject to future economic conditions and to financial, business, regulatory and other factors, many of which are beyond the Company’s control. Effect of New Accounting Standards On August15, 2001, the FASB issued SFAS No.143 , Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations , which is effective for the Company’s fiscal year beginning January1, 2003. This statement requires, among other things, the accounting and reporting of legal obligations associated with the retirement of long-lived assets that result from the acquisition, construction, development or normal operation of a long-lived asset. The Company is evaluating, but has not yet determined the impact of the adoption of this standard on its financial position, results of operations and cash flows. Effective January1, 2002, the Company adopted SFAS No.144 , Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets. This statement addresses accounting and reporting of all long-lived assets, except goodwill, that are either held and used or disposed of through sale or other means. In April 2002, FASB issued SFAS No.145, Rescission of FASB Statements No. 4, 44, and 62, Amendment of FASB Statement No.13, and Technical Corrections . SFAS No.145 will generally require gains and losses on extinguishments of debt to be classified as income or loss from continuing operations rather than as extraordinary items as previously required under SFAS No.4. Extraordinary treatment will be required for certain extinguishments as provided in APB Opinion No.30. Accordingly, gains or losses from extinguishments of debt for fiscal years beginning after May15, 2002 will not be reported as extraordinary items unless the extinguishment qualifies as an extraordinary item under the provisions of APB Opinion No.30. Upon adoption, any gain or loss on extinguishment of debt previously classified as an extraordinary item in prior periods presented that does not meet the criteria of APB Opinion No.30 for such classification will be reclassified to conform with the provisions of SFAS No.145. Earlier application of the provisions of SFAS No.145 related to the rescission of SFAS No.4 is encouraged. SFAS No.145 does not have any impact on the Company’s results of operations for the current periods reported. In June 2002, FASB issued SFAS No.146, Accounting for Costs Associated with Exit or Disposal Activities. SFAS No.146 requires companies recognize costs associated with exit or disposal activities when they are incurred rather than at the date of a commitment to an exit or disposal plan. SFAS No.146 is to be applied prospectively to exit or disposal activities initiated after December31, 2002. The Company does not believe the adoption of this statement will have a material impact on its financial position, results of operations, or cash flows. On December31, 2002, FASB issued SFAS No.148, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation—Transition and Disclosure. SFAS No.148 amends SFAS No.123, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation , to provide alternative methods of transition for a voluntary change to the fair value based method of accounting for stock-based employee compensation. In addition, SFAS No.148 amends the disclosure requirements of SFAS No.123 to require prominent disclosures in both annual and interim financial statements about the method of accounting for stock-based employee compensation and the effect of the method used on reported results. The Company does not believe the adoption of this statement will have a material impact on its financial position, results of operations, or cash flows. 43 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Outlook The Company expects that, overall, the demand for telecommunications services in Alaska to grow, particularly as a result of: • increasing demand for private network services by government and business on a statewide basis on either a circuit switched or IP basis, • increasing demand for wireless voice and data services, and • growth in demand for DSL and Internet access services due to higher business and consumer bandwidth needs. The Company believes that it will be able to capitalize on this demand through its diverse service offerings on its owned circuit switched and IP facilities and new sales and marketing initiatives directed toward basic voice, enhanced and data services. There are currently a number of regulatory proceedings underway at the state and federal levels that could have a significant impact on the Company’s operations . The Company cannot predict with certainty the impact of current or future regulatory developments on any of its businesses. The telecommunications industry is extremely competitive, and the Company expects competition to intensify in the future. As an ILEC, the Company faces competition mainly from resellers, local providers who lease its UNEs and, to a lesser degree, from facilities-based providers of local telephone services. In addition, as a result of the RCA’s recent affirmation of the APUC’s termination of the Company’s rural exemptions, the Company may be required to provide interconnection elements and/or wholesale discounted services to competitors in all or some of its rural service areas. Moreover, while wireless telephone services have historically complemented traditional LEC services, the Company anticipates that existing and emerging wireless technologies may increasingly compete with LEC services. In wireless services, the Company currently competes with at least one other wireless provider in each of its wireless service areas. The Company competes for directory advertising services with at least one other publisher in substantially all of its service areas. In the highly competitive business for Internet access services, the Company currently competes with a number of established online service companies, interexchange carriers and cable companies. In the interexchange market, the Company believes it currently has less than 10% of total revenue in Alaska and faces competition from the two major interexchange providers. The telecommunications industry is subject to continuous technological change. The Company expects that new technological developments in the future will generally serve to enhance its ability to provide service to its customers . However, these developments may also increase competition or require the Company to make significant capital investments to maintain its leadership position in Alaska. Impact of Inflation The effect of inflation on ACS Group’s financial results has not been significant in the periods presented. 44 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Item7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk The Company has issued senior discount debentures, senior subordinated notes and has entered into a bank credit facility. These on-balance sheet financial instruments, to the extent they provide for variable rates of interest, expose the Company to interest rate risk, with the primary interest rate risk exposure resulting from changes in LIBOR or the prime rate, which are used to determine the interest rates that are applicable to borrowings under the Company’s bank credit facilities. The Company uses derivative financial instruments, specifically an interest rate swap agreement, to partially hedge variable interest transactions. The Company’s derivative financial instrument transaction has been entered into for hedging purposes only. The terms and characteristics of the derivative financial instruments are matched with the underlying on-balance sheet instrument and do not constitute speculative or leveraged positions independent of these exposures. The information below provides information about the Company’s sensitivity to market risk associated with fluctuations in interest rates as of December 31, 2002. To the extent that the Company’s financial instruments expose the Company to interest rate risk, they are presented within each market risk category in the table below. The table presents principal cash flows and related expected interest rates by year of maturity for the Company’s bank credit facilities, senior subordinated notes, senior discount debentures, and capital leases and other long-term obligations outstanding at December31, 2002. Weighted average variable rates for the bank credit facilities are based on implied forward rates in the LIBOR yield curve as of December31, 2002. For the interest rate swap agreement, the table presents the notional amount and the related reference interest rates by year of maturity. Fair values included herein have been determined based on (i)the carrying value for the bank credit facility at December31, 2002, as interest rates are reset periodically; (ii) quoted market prices for senior subordinated notes; (iii)by discounting expected cash flows to their present value for the senior discount debentures using the Company’s estimated current borrowing cost for subordinated debt; and (iv)quoted prices from a financial institution for the Company’s swap agreement. Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc.’s Consolidated Financial Statements contain descriptions of the senior discount debentures, senior subordinated notes, credit facility, capital leases and other long-term obligations and the interest rate swap agreement and should be read in conjunction with the table below. 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Thereafter Total (dollars in thousands) Fair Value Interest Bearing Liabilities: Bank credit facility — tranche A $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 144,000 $ 3.62 % 4.40 % 5.53 % 6.25 % $ — — Weighted average interest rate (variable) Bank credit facility — tranche B $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 142,500 $ Weighted average interest rate (variable) 4.37 % 5.15 % 6.28 % 7.03 % 7.52 % — — — — $ 148,500 $ 148,500 4.95 % $ 148,500 $ 148,500 6.07 % Bank credit facility — tranche C $ 1,350 $ 1,350 $ 1,350 $ 1,350 $ 1,350 $ 126,900 $ 133,650 $ 133,650 Senior subordinated notes $ — $ — $ — $ — $ — $ 150,000 $ 150,000 $ 107,250 Weighted average interest rate (variable) 4.62 % 5.40 % 6.53 % 7.28 % 7.80 % 8.11 % 6.62 % Average interest rate (fixed) 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % Senior discount debentures $ — $ — $ — $ — $ — $ 17,313 $ 17,313 $ 21,316 Capital leases and other long-term $ 1,583 $ 1,710 $ 910 $ 996 $ 1,058 $ 5,924 $ 12,181 $ 12,181 Average interest rate (fixed) 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % Average interest rate (fixed) Interest Rate Derivatives: Variable to Fixed Interest Rate Swap Notional amount 8.06 % 8.09 % 8.11 % 8.13 % 8.16 % 9.46 % 8.34 % $ 217,500 $ 14,152 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. 5.99 % 5.99 % 1.37 % 1.61 % — — — — — — — — 5.99 % 1.49 % Fixed Rate Payable Weighted average Variable Rate Receivable 45 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents The information below provides information about the Company’s sensitivity to market risk associated with fluctuations in interest rates as of December 31, 2001. To the extent that the Company’s financial instruments expose the Company to interest rate risk, they are presented within each market risk category in the table below. The table presents principal cash flows and related expected interest rates by year of maturity for the Company’s bank credit facilities, senior subordinated notes, senior discount debentures, and capital leases and other long-term obligations outstanding at December31, 2001. Weighted average variable rates for the bank credit facilities are based on implied forward rates in the LIBOR yield curve as of December31, 2001. For the interest rate swap agreement, the table presents the notional amount and the related reference interest rates by year of maturity. The Company assumed that an option to extend the term of the swap by two years would be exercised based on the LIBOR rates in effect at December31, 2001 and the implied forward yield curve. Fair values included herein have been determined based on (i)the carrying value for the bank credit facility at December31, 2001, as interest rates are reset periodically; (ii)quoted market prices for senior subordinated notes; (iii)by discounting expected cash flows to their present value for the senior discount debentures using the Company’s estimated current borrowing cost for subordinated debt; and (iv)quoted prices from a financial institution for the Company’s swap agreement. Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc.’s Consolidated Financial Statements contain descriptions of the senior discount debentures, senior subordinated notes, credit facility, capital leases and other long-term obligations and the interest rate swap agreement and should be read in conjunction with the table below. Interest Bearing Liabilities: Bank credit facility — tranche A Weighted average interest rate (variable) 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Thereafter Total (dollars in thousands) Fair Value $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 144,000 $ 4.42 % 6.34 % 7.96 % 8.42 % 8.63 % — — $ 150,000 $ 150,000 5.96 % Bank credit facility — tranche B $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 1,500 $ 142,500 $ 150,000 $ 150,000 Bank credit facility — tranche C $ 1,350 $ 1,350 $ 1,350 $ 1,350 $ 1,350 $ 128,250 $ 135,000 $ 135,000 Weighted average interest rate (variable) 5.17 % 7.09 % 8.71 % 9.17 % 9.39 % 9.52 % 8.17 % Senior subordinated notes Senior discount debentures Weighted average interest rate (variable) Average interest rate (fixed) Average interest rate (fixed) $ $ 5.42 % 7.34 % 8.96 % 9.42 % 9.64 % 9.83 % 8.43 % — $ — $ — $ — $ — $ 150,000 $ 150,000 $ 148,500 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % 9.38 % — $ — $ — $ — $ — $ 17,313 $ 17,313 $ 21,212 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % 13.00 % Capital leases and other long-term $ 756 $ 652 $ 701 $ 771 $ 842 $ 7,881 $ 11,603 $ 11,603 Interest Rate Derivatives: Variable to Fixed Interest Rate Swap Notional amount Average interest rate (fixed) Fixed Rate Payable Weighted average Variable Rate Receivable 8.67 % 8.58 % 8.55 % 8.51 % 8.46 % 9.31 % 8.68 % $ 217,500 $ 11,437 5.99 % 5.99 % 5.99 % 2.17 % 4.09 % 5.56 % — — — — — — 5.99 % 3.94 % Item8. Financial Statements and Supplementary Data Consolidated financial statements of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. and Subsidiaries are submitted as a separate section of this Form10-K . See Index to Consolidated Financial Statements and Schedule, which appears on page F-1 hereof. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Item9. Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure None. 46 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents PART III Item10. Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant Except for the following information regarding ACS Group’s executive officers and directors, the information required by this item will be included in ACS Group’s definitive proxy statement for its 2003 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Proxy Statement”), or by an amendment to this report to be filed on or before April30, 2003 and such information is incorporated herein by reference. Executive Officers and Directors of the Registrant Set forth below are the executive officers and directors of ACS Group as of the date hereof: Name Age Position Charles E. Robinson Wesley E. Carson Kevin P. Hemenway Leonard A. Steinberg Byron I. Mallott W. Dexter Paine, III Saul A. Fox Wray T. Thorn Brian Rogers Charles P. Sitkin 69 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer 52 President 42 Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer 49 Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary 60 Director 42 Director 49 Director 31 Director 52 Director 68 Director Charles E. Robinson , ACS Group’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer since May 1999, has over four decades of experience in the telecommunications industry. Mr.Robinson was instrumental in creating Alaska’s long distance communications systems, including the White Alice Communications System, beginning in the late 1950’s. Between 1979 and 1982, Mr.Robinson served as President of Alascom, the state’s primary long distance carrier at the time. Under his guidance, Alascom developed the first statewide long distance service network in Alaska, connecting with more than 27 independent local companies. Mr.Robinson served as President and Chief Operating Officer of Pacific Telecom from 1981 until its sale to CenturyTel in 1997 and was appointed Chairman and Chief Executive Officer in 1989. Mr.Robinson remained as President and Chief Executive officer at Pacific Telecom until February 1999. Mr.Robinson has been a member of the National Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee for the last 18years, having been appointed by President Reagan. Mr.Robinson has also served on the Board of Directors of the United States Telecommunications Association from 1993 to 1995 and from 1999 to the present. Since January 2000, Mr.Robinson has served on the Board of Directors of WJ Communications, Inc. Wesley E. Carson , ACS Group’s President, has been with the Company since its inception . On October7, 1999, Mr.Carson (previously an Executive Vice President) was appointed President and Chief Operating Officer. Mr.Robinson had previously held the title of President. Mr.Carson served as ACS’s Chief Operating Officer during 1999 and 2000, and the President and Chief Administrative Officer during 2001. Mr.Carson has over 20years of telecommunications experience. He began his career in telecommunications in 1980 with TRT Telecommunications Corporation, an international data and voice carrier located in Washington, D.C. that was acquired by Pacific Telecom in 1988. From 1989 to 1998, Mr.Carson served as the Vice President of Human Resources for Pacific Telecom. From July 1998 to May 1999, Mr.Carson served as the Executive Vice President of LEC Consulting. Mr.Carson holds a B.A. in International Relations from Brigham Young University, a Master of Public Administration degree from the University of Illinois-Springfield and a J.D. from Georgetown University. 47 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Kevin P. Hemenway is Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer, a position he has held since November 2000 . Mr.Hemenway joined ACS Group as Vice President and Treasurer in July 1999 and served in that capacity until assuming his current role . Mr.Hemenway has over 12years of prior experience in the telecommunications industry. Before joining the Company, Mr. Hemenway served as the Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer of Atlantic Tele-Network, Inc. based in the U.S. Virgin Islands . From January 1990 to October 1998, as an independent consultant, Mr.Hemenway performed financial, accounting, management and rate making consulting services for the telecommunications industry, principally for Atlantic Tele-Network, Inc. and its subsidiaries. From 1986 through 1989, Mr.Hemenway was employed by Deloitte Touche LLP as a CPA and manager, performing both audit and consulting services and from 1983 to 1986, was employed by Grant Thornton as a CPA and senior staff accountant. Mr.Hemenway graduated from Creighton University in 1982 with a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration, majoring in accounting, and is a non-practicing CPA certificate holder registered in the State of Nebraska. Leonard A. Steinberg is Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary, a position he has held since January 2001. Mr.Steinberg left private practice in June 2000 to join ACS Group as a Senior Attorney in the Corporate Legal Department . From 1998 to 2000, Mr.Steinberg used his expertise in regulatory and administrative matters to represent telecommunications and energy clients of Brena, Bell Clarkson, P.C., an Anchorage, Alaska law firm . Prior to that, Mr.Steinberg was a Partner in the firm of Hoise, Wes, Sacks Brelsford with offices in Anchorage, Alaska and San Francisco, California. Mr. Steinberg practiced in the firm’s Anchorage office from 1996-1998 and in the firm’s San Francisco office from 1988-1996 where he primarily represented large clients in oil and gas royalty and tax disputes . Mr.Steinberg holds a Masters in Public Administration degree from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, Masters of Business Administration degree from U.C. Berkeley’s Haas School of Business and a J.D. from the University of California’s Hastings College of Law. Byron I. Mallott , a director since January 2000, is the President and Chief Executive Officer of the First Alaskans Institute . From 1995 until January 2000, Mr.Mallott served as the Executive Director of the Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation . Prior to joining the Alaska Permanent Fund Corporation, Mr.Mallott served in various capacities, including Director, Chairman and President and Chief Executive Officer of Sealaska Corporation over a period of nearly 20years . Mr.Mallott has also served in various political appointments and elected positions and presently serves on the Boards of Alaska Air Group, Inc. and Native American Bank, N.A. W. Dexter Paine, III , a director since July 1998, was a co-founder and has been President of Fox Paine Company since its inception in 1997 . From 1994 until founding Fox Paine, Mr.Paine served as a senior partner of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts Co (“KKR”). Prior to joining KKR, Mr.Paine served as a general partner at Robertson Stephens Company. Mr.Paine has a B.A. in economics from Williams College. Since January 2000, Mr.Paine has served as the Chairman of the Board of Directors of WJ Communications, Inc. Saul A. Fox , a director since May 1999, was a co-founder and has been Chief Executive Officer of Fox Paine Company since its inception in 1997. From 1984 until founding Fox Paine Company, Mr.Fox was at Kohlberg Kravis Roberts Co (“KKR”). Mr.Fox was a senior general partner of KKR prior to retiring from the firm to form Fox Paine Company. Prior to joining KKR, Mr. Fox was an attorney at Latham Watkins, a law firm headquartered in Los Angeles, California. Mr.Fox has a B.S. in communications and computer science from Temple University and a J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Law School . Since January 2000, Mr.Fox has served on the Board of Directors of WJ Communications, Inc. Wray T. Thorn , a director since January 2000, has also been a director with Fox Paine Company since January 2000 . From 1996 until joining Fox Paine Company, Mr.Thorn was a principal and founding member of Dubilier Company . Prior to joining Dubilier Company, Mr.Thorn was an associate in the Acquisition Finance Group of Chase Securities, Inc . Mr.Thorn is a graduate of Harvard University . Since January 2000, Mr.Thorn has served on the Board of Directors of WJ Communications, Inc. 48 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Brian Rogers , a director since February 2001, is currently Principal Consultant and Chief Financial Officer for Information Insights, Inc., a management and public policy consulting firm. Mr.Rogers served as Vice President of Finance for the University of Alaska Statewide System from 1988 to 1995 . Mr.Rogers is a former state legislator, who served in the Alaska State House of Representatives from 1979 to 1982 . Mr.Rogers chaired the State of Alaska Long-Range Planning Commission during 1995 and 1996, and currently, as a Regent of the University of Alaska, serves as the Board Chair and a member of all committees, including the University’s Finance and Audit Committee . He holds a Master in Public Administration degree from the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. Charles P. Sitkin , a director since February 2003, is currently an independent consultant assisting enterprises with strategic and organizational planning. Prior to 1994, Mr.Sitkin’s experience includes being the National Director of Management Consulting at R.W. Beck and Associates, a Partner and Office Director of Information Technology at Ernest Young and various leadership positions at the Boeing Company. Mr.Sitkin is a Certified Management Consultant and is a graduate from Lafayette College and the University of Washington. Carl H. Marrs , a director since July 1999, left the board in October 2002 for personal reasons unrelated to ACS Group. Item11. Executive Compensation The information required by this item will be included in ACS Group’s definitive Proxy Statement, and such information is incorporated herein by reference. Item12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management The information required by this item will be included in ACS Group’s definitive Proxy Statement, and such information is incorporated herein by reference. Item13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions The information required by this item will be included in ACS Group’s definitive Proxy Statement, and such information is incorporated herein by reference. 49 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents PART IV Item14. Controls and Procedures Evaluation of disclosure controls and procedures Within the 90days prior to the date of this report, the Company carried out an evaluation of the effectiveness of the design and operation of the Company’s “disclosure controls and procedures” (as defined in the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) Rules13a-14(c) and 15d-14(c)) under the supervision and with the participation of the Company’s management, including the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and its Chief Financial Officer. Based upon that evaluation, the Company’s Chief Executive Officer and its Chief Financial Officer concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures are effective. Disclosure controls and procedures are controls and other procedures that are designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed in Company reports filed or submitted under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported, within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission’s rules and forms. Disclosure controls and procedures include, without limitation, controls and procedures designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed in Company reports filed under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to management to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure. Changes in internal controls There were no significant changes in our internal controls or, to our knowledge, in other factors that could significantly affect our disclosure controls and procedures subsequent to the date the Company carried out this evaluation. Item15. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and Reports on Form8-K ( a ) ( b ) 1. Financial Statements The consolidated financial statements of ACS Group are submitted as a separate section of this Form10-K. See Index to Consolidated Financial Statements and Schedule which appears on page F-1 hereof. 2. Financial Statement Schedule Financial statement schedules for ACS Group and its subsidiaries are submitted as a separate section of this Form10-K. See Index to Consolidated Financial Statements and Schedule which appears on page F-1 hereof. Reports on Form8-K The following item was reported on Form8-K, filed October2, 2002: Item5 Other Events — CarlH. Marrs submitted his resignation as director of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. effective as of October2, 2002. Mr.Marrs cited concerns regarding the time and effort of his other commitments as his reasons for tendering his resignation. 50 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents (c) Exhibits Exhibit No. Description 2.1 2.2 3.1 3.2 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 4.10 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 Purchase Agreement, dated as of August14, 1998, as amended, by and among ALEC Acquisition Sub Corp., CenturyTel of the Northwest, Inc. and CenturyTel Wireless, Inc. (1) Asset Purchase Agreement, dated as of October20, 1998, by and between Alaska Communications Systems, Inc. and the Municipality of Anchorage (1) Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant (4) Amended and Restated By-Laws of the Registrant (4) Specimen of Common Stock Certificate (4) Stockholders’ Agreement, dated as of May14, 1999, by and among the Registrant and the Investors listed on the signature pages thereto (1) First Amendment to Stockholders’ Agreement, dated as of July6, 1999, by and among the Registrant and the Stockholders listed on the signature pages thereto (1) Second Amendment to Stockholders’ Agreement, dated as of November16, 1999 by and among the Registrant and the Stockholders listed on the signature pages thereto (4) Indenture, dated as of May14, 1999, by and between Alaska Communications Systems Holdings, Inc., the Guarantors (as defined therein) and IBJ Whitehall Bank Trust Company (1) Purchase Agreement, dated as of May11, 1999, by and among Alaska Communications Systems Holdings, Inc., the Guarantors, Chase Securities Inc., CIBC World Markets Corp. and Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation (1) Indenture, dated as of May14, 1999, by and between the Registrant and The Bank of New York (1) First Amendment, dated as of October29, 1999, to Indenture listed as ExhibitNo.4.7 (2) Form of Second Amendment dated as of November17, 1999 to Indenture listed as ExhibitNo.4.7 (4) Purchase Agreement, dated as of May11, 1999, by and among the Registrant, DLJ Investment Partners, L.P., DLJ Investment Funding, Inc. and DLJ ESC II, L.P. (1) Exchange and Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of May14, 1999, by and among Alaska Communications Systems Holdings, Inc., the Guarantors, Chase Securities Inc., CIBC World Markets Corp. and Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation (1) Exchange and Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of May14, 1999, by and among the Registrant, DLJ Investment Partners, L.P., DLJ Investment Funding, Inc. and DLJ ESC II L.P. (1) Credit Agreement, dated as of May14, 1999, by and among Alaska Communications Systems Holdings, Inc., the Registrant, the financial institutions Lenders party thereto, The Chase Manhattan Bank, Credit Suisse First Boston and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (1) Amendment No.1, dated as of October19, 1999 to Credit Agreement listed as ExhibitNo.10.3 (2) Employment Agreement, dated as of May3, 2001 by and among Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc., the Registrant and Charles E. Robinson (6) Employment Agreement, dated as of May3, 2001 by and among Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc., the Registrant and Wesley E. Carson (6) ALEC Holdings, Inc. 1999 Stock Incentive Plan (1) Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 1999 Stock Incentive Plan (4) Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 1999 Non-Employee Director Compensation Plan (4) 10.7 10.8 10.9 10.10 Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 1999 Employee Stock Purchase Plan (4) 10.11 Comprehensive Telecommunications Service Agreement Number 99-123-A between the State of Alaska and Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc., dated as of December10, 2001 (5) 10.12 Amendment and waiver, dated as of June27, 2002 to the Credit Agreement listed as ExhibitNo.10.3 (7) 21.1 23.1 24.1 Subsidiaries of the Registrant Consent of Deloitte Touche LLP relating to the audited financial statements of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. Powers of Attorney (included on signature page) (3) 51 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents 99.1 Certification of Charles R. Robinson, Chief Executive Officer, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section1350, as adopted to Section906 of The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. 99.2 Certification of Kevin P. Hemenway, Chief Financial Officer, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section1350, as adopted to Section906 of The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. (1) Filed as an exhibit to the Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-4 file No.333-82361 and incorporated by reference thereto. (2) Filed as an exhibit to the Registrant’s Form8-K filed on November5, 1999 and incorporated by reference thereto. (3) Previously filed on October8, 1999 and incorporated by reference thereto. (4) Previously filed as an exhibit to the Registrant’s Registration Statement on FormS-1/A file No.333-888753 filed on November17, 1999 and incorporated by reference thereto. (5) Filed as an exhibit to the Registrant’s Form10-K filed on March29, 2002 and incorporated by reference thereto. (6) Filed as an exhibit to the Registrant’s Form10-Q filed on April30, 2002 and incorporated by reference thereto. (7) Filed as an exhibit to the Registrant’s Form10-Q filed on July31, 2002 and incorporated by reference thereto. 52 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated. ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. SIGNATURES Signature /s/ Charles E. Robinson Charles E. Robinson /s/ Wesley E. Carson Wesley E. Carson /s/ Kevin P. Hemenway Kevin P. Hemenway /s/ Leonard A. Steinberg Leonard A. Steinberg /s/ Byron I. Mallott Byron I. Mallott /s/ Brian Rogers Brian Rogers /s/ W. Dexter Paine, III W. Dexter Paine, III /s/ Saul A. Fox Saul A. Fox /s/ Wray T. Thorn Wray T. Thorn /s/ Charles P. Sitkin Charles P. Sitkin Title Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board President Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer (Principal Accounting Officer) Vice President, General Counsel and Corporate Secretary Director Director Director Director Director Director 53 Date March 6, 2003 March 6, 2003 March 6, 2003 March 6, 2003 March 6, 2003 March 6, 2003 March 6, 2003 March 6, 2003 March 6, 2003 March 6, 2003 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Form of Sarbanes-Oxley Section302(a) Certification CERTIFICATIONS I, Charles E. Robinson, Chief Executive Officer of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc., certify that: 1. I have reviewed this annual report on Form10-K of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc.; 2. Based on my knowledge, this annual report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this annual report; 3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this annual report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this annual report; 4. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules13a-14 and 15d-14) for the registrant and we have: a ) b ) designed such disclosure controls and procedures to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this annual report is being prepared; evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures as of a date within 90days prior to the filing date of this annual report (the “Evaluation Date”); and c ) presented in this annual report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures based on our evaluation as of the Evaluation Date; 5. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors: a ) b ) all significant deficiencies in the design or operation of internal controls which could adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial data and have identified for the registrant’s auditors any material weaknesses in internal controls; and any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal controls; and 6. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have indicated in this annual report whether or not there were significant changes in internal controls or in other factors that could significantly affect internal controls subsequent to the date of our most recent evaluation, including any corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses. Date: March 6, 2003 /s/ Charles E. Robinson Charles E. Robinson Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. 54 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Form of Sarbanes-Oxley Section302(a) Certification I, Kevin P. Hemenway, Chief Financial Officer of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc, certify that: 1. I have reviewed this annual report on Form10-K of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc.; 2. Based on my knowledge, this annual report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this annual report; 3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this annual report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the registrant as of, and for, the periods presented in this annual report; 4. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules13a-14 and 15d-14) for the registrant and we have: a ) b ) designed such disclosure controls and procedures to ensure that material information relating to the registrant, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this annual report is being prepared; evaluated the effectiveness of the registrant’s disclosure controls and procedures as of a date within 90days prior to the filing date of this annual report (the “Evaluation Date”); and c ) presented in this annual report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures based on our evaluation as of the Evaluation Date; 5. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation, to the registrant’s auditors and the audit committee of the registrant’s board of directors: a ) b ) all significant deficiencies in the design or operation of internal controls which could adversely affect the registrant’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial data and have identified for the registrant’s auditors any material weaknesses in internal controls; and any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the registrant’s internal controls; and 6. The registrant’s other certifying officer and I have indicated in this annual report whether or not there were significant changes in internal controls or in other factors that could significantly affect internal controls subsequent to the date of our most recent evaluation, including any corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses. Date: March 6, 2003 /s/ Kevin P. Hemenway Kevin P. Hemenway Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc 55 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SCHEDULE Independent Auditors’ Report Consolidated Balance Sheets – December31, 2002 and 2001 Consolidated Statements of Operations – Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity – Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows – Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements ScheduleII – Valuation and Qualifying Accounts F-2 F-3 F-4 F-5 F-6 F-7 F-33 F-1 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents Board of Directors and Shareholders Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. Anchorage, Alaska INDEPENDENT AUDITORS’ REPORT We have audited the consolidated balance sheets of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. and Subsidiaries (the “Company”) as of December31, 2002 and 2001, and the related consolidated statements of operations, stockholders’ equity, and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2002. Our audits included the financial statement schedule listed in Item 15(a)2 of Form10-K. These financial statements and financial statement schedule are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements and financial statement schedule based on our audits. We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing standards generally accepted in the United States of America. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion. In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. and Subsidiaries as of December31, 2002 and 2001, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December31, 2002 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Also in our opinion, such financial statement schedule, when considered in relation to the basic consolidated financial statements taken as a whole, presents fairly in all material respects the information set forth therein. As discussed in Note 5 to the consolidated financial statements, effective January1, 2002 the Company adopted Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No.142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets. /s/ DELOITTE TOUCHE LLP Portland, Oregon February20, 2003 F-2 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Consolidated Balance Sheets December31, 2002 and 2001 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) Assets Current assets: Cash and cash equivalents Restricted cash Accounts receivable-trade, net of allowance of $6,075 and $4,944 Materials and supplies Prepayments and other current assets Assets held for sale Total current assets Property, plant and equipment Less: Accumulated depreciation and amortization Property, plant and equipment, net Goodwill Intangible assets, net Debt issuance costs, net of amortization of $16,365 and $12,126 Deferred charges and other assets Total assets Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity Current liabilities: Current portion of long-term obligations Accounts payable-affiliate Accounts payable, accrued and other current liabilities Advance billings and customer deposits Total current liabilities Long-term obligations, net of current portion Other deferred credits and long-term liabilities Commitments and contingencies Stockholders’ equity: Preferred stock, no par, 5,000 authorized, no shares issued and outstanding Common stock, $.01 par value; 145,000 shares authorized, 33,481 and 33,221 shares issued and 30,745 and 31,688 outstanding, respectively Treasury stock, 2,737 and 1,532 shares, respectively, at cost Paid in capital in excess of par value Accumulated deficit Accumulated other comprehensive loss Total stockholders’ equity 2002 2001 $ 18,565 $ 41,012 3,440 48,820 11,203 6,172 261 88,461 1,090,365 625,276 465,089 77,225 23,269 21,529 26,047 701,620 $ 6,932 46,912 8,723 6,032 — 109,611 1,036,829 557,849 478,980 250,495 26,785 25,768 9,875 901,514 5,649 $ 4,823 $ $ 1,319 49,796 9,804 66,568 602,114 32,930 — — 334 (12,082 ) 277,810 (247,168 ) (18,886 ) 8 1,303 63,081 9,190 78,397 606,427 25,003 — — 332 (9,735 ) 276,840 (61,921 ) (13,829 ) 191,687 901,514 Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 701,620 $ See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements F-3 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Consolidated Statements of Operations Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) Operating revenues: Local telephone Wireless Directory Internet Interexchange Operating expenses: Total operating revenues Local telephone Wireless Directory Internet Interexchange Unusual charges Depreciation and amortization Loss on disposal of assets, net Goodwill impairment loss Operating income (loss) Other income and expense: Total operating expenses Interest expense Interest income and other Equity in income (loss)of investments Total other income (expense) Loss before income taxes, discontinued operations and cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Income tax benefit Loss from continuing operations Loss from discontinued operations Loss before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net loss Loss per share — basic and diluted: Loss from continuing operations Loss from discontinued operations Loss before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net loss $ $ $ Weighted average shares outstanding: Basic Diluted See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements F-4 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. 2002 2001 2000 $ 226,447 $ 221,411 $ 222,268 43,180 33,604 20,847 19,424 343,502 117,277 27,912 14,170 29,502 27,547 — 82,940 2,163 64,755 366,266 (22,764 ) (51,704 ) 2,203 — (49,501 ) (72,265 ) 41,894 33,870 13,724 21,316 332,215 120,465 25,649 14,684 15,677 29,509 — 79,108 — — 285,092 47,123 (60,157 ) 3,250 69 (56,838 ) (9,715 ) — (72,265 ) (7,632 ) (79,897 ) (105,350 ) (185,247 ) $ 195 (9,520 ) (1,718 ) (11,238 ) — (11,238 ) $ 41,155 29,156 9,170 11,778 313,527 131,542 26,306 13,334 11,785 19,749 5,288 71,755 — — 279,759 33,768 (64,559 ) 6,609 (303 ) (58,253 ) (24,485 ) 197 (24,288 ) (917 ) (25,205 ) — (25,205 ) (2.30 ) $ (0.30 ) $ (0.74 ) (0.24 ) (2.54 ) (3.35 ) (5.89 ) $ (0.06 ) (0.36 ) — (0.36 ) $ (0.03 ) (0.77 ) — (0.77 ) 31,464 31,474 31,523 31,523 32,654 32,654 Table of Contents Balance, December31, 1999 Net loss Issuance of 343 shares of common stock, $.01 par Purchase of 1,532 shares of treasury stock Balance, December31, 2000 Components of Comprehensive loss: Net loss Minimum pension liability adjustment Interest rate swap marked to market Total comprehensive loss Issuance of 220 shares of common stock, $.01 par Balance, December31, 2001 Components of Comprehensive loss: Net loss Minimum pension liability adjustment Interest rate swap marked to market Total comprehensive loss Issuance of 260 shares of common stock, $.01 par Purchase of 1,205 shares of treasury stock Balance, December31, 2002 ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands, Except Per Share Amounts) Common Treasury Stock Stock Paid in Capital in Excess of Par Accumulated Other Accumulated Comprehensive Stockholders' Deficit Loss Equity $ 273,119 $ (25,478 ) $ $ 327 $ — 3 — — — — — 2,349 (9,735 ) — (25,205 ) — — 330 (9,735 ) 275,468 (50,683 ) — — — — — $ 247,968 (25,205 ) 2,352 (9,735 ) 215,380 — — — 2 — — — — — — — 1,372 (11,238 ) — — — — (2,392 ) (11,238 ) (2,392 ) (11,437 ) (11,437 ) (25,067 ) — 1,374 332 (9,735 ) 276,840 (61,921 ) (13,829 ) 191,687 — — — 2 — — — — — (2,347 ) — — — 970 — (185,247 ) — — — — — (2,342 ) (2,715 ) — — (185,247 ) (2,342 ) (2,715 ) (190,304 ) 972 (2,347 ) $ 334 $ (12,082 ) $ 277,810 $ (247,168 ) $ (18,886 ) $ 8 See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements F-5 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands) Cash Flows from Operating Activities: Net loss Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by operating activities: 2002 2001 2000 $ (185,247 ) $ (11,238 ) $ (25,205 ) Loss on discontinued operations Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Depreciation and amortization Loss on disposal of assets, net Goodwill impairment loss Amortization of debt issuance costs and original issue discount Investment tax credits Capitalized interest Other deferred credits 7,632 105,350 82,940 2,163 64,755 4,524 1,718 — 79,108 — — 4,644 917 — 71,755 — — 4,872 — (195 ) (197 ) (1,157 ) (1,416 ) (1,096 ) 3,073 418 (1,141 ) Changes in components of working capital: Accounts receivable and other current assets (4,722 ) 95 (5,649 ) Accounts payable and other current liabilities Other (12,460 ) (1,375 ) 5,530 (2,386 ) 3,560 1,084 Net cash used in discontinued operations (649 ) (1,015 ) (407 ) Net cash provided by operating activities Cash Flows from Investing Activities: Construction and capital expenditures, net of capitalized interest Acquisition of PCS licenses Release of funds from escrow Issuance of note receivable Proceeds from liquidation of minority interest investment Issuance of note receivable from officer Cost of acquisitions, net of cash received Placement of funds in escrow 64,827 75,263 48,493 (66,977 ) (87,582 ) (69,101 ) (300 ) 3,706 (15,000 ) — — — — — — — 1,370 (339 ) — — — — — (1,000 ) (5,598 ) (6,932 ) — Net cash used by investing activities (78,571 ) (94,483 ) (74,699 ) Cash Flows from Financing Activities: Payments on long-term debt Issuance of common stock and warrants Purchase of treasury stock Net cash used by financing activities (7,328 ) (3,038 ) (6,509 ) 972 (2,347 ) 1,374 — 2,352 (9,735 ) (8,703 ) (1,664 ) (13,892 ) 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Decrease in cash Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the year Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year Supplemental Cash Flow Data: Interest paid Income taxes paid Supplemental Noncash Transactions: Property acquired under capital leases Note payable in connection with acquisition Minimum pension liability adjustment Interest rate swap marked to market $ $ $ (22,447 ) (20,884 ) (40,098 ) 41,012 18,565 $ 61,896 41,012 $ 101,994 61,896 48,087 $ 51,716 $ 59,672 — — — 4,187 $ — $ 3,152 — 2,342 2,715 — 2,392 11,437 2,250 — — See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements F-6 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 1.DESCRIPTION OF COMPANY AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. and Subsidiaries (the “Company” or “ACS Group”) a Delaware corporation, is engaged principally in providing local telephone, wireless, directory, Internet, interexchange network and other services to its customers in the State of Alaska through its telecommunications subsidiaries. The Company was formed in October of 1998 for the purpose of acquiring and operating telecommunications properties. The accompanying consolidated financial statements for the Company are as of December31, 2002 and 2001 and for the years ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 and represent the consolidated financial position, results of operations and cash flows principally of the following entities: Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. • Alaska Communications Systems Holdings, Inc. (“ACS Holdings”) • ACS of Alaska, Inc. (“ACSAK”) • ACS of the Northland, Inc. (“ACSN”) • ACS of Fairbanks, Inc. (“ACSF”) • ACS of Anchorage, Inc. (“ACSA”) • ACS Wireless, Inc. (“ACSW”) • ACS Long Distance, Inc. (“ACSLD”) • ACS Television, L.L.C. (“ACSTV”) • ACS Internet, Inc. (“ACSI”) • ACS InfoSource, Inc. (“ACSIS”) • A summary of significant accounting policies followed by the Company is set forth below: Basis Of Presentation The consolidated financial statements include all majority-owned subsidiaries. All significant intercompany balances have been eliminated. Certain reclassifications have been made to the 2001 and 2000 financial statements to make them conform to the current presentation. Use Of Estimates The preparation of financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of commitments and contingencies at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Among the significant estimates affecting the financial statements are those related to the realizable value of accounts receivable, materials and supplies, long-lived assets, income taxes and network access revenue reserves. Actual results may differ from those estimates. Cash and Cash Equivalents 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. For purposes of the consolidated balance sheets and statements of cash flows, the Company generally considers all highly liquid investments with a maturity at acquisition of three months or less to be cash equivalents. Restricted Cash The Company placed in escrow restricted cash as a judicial requirement of an appeal of a claim. This claim is expected to be adjudicated or settled in 2003. In the event the Company prevails, the restriction will be lifted, otherwise, the cash will be paid to the claimants. Liabilities associated with this claim are recorded in the Company’s accounts payable, accrued and other current liabilities. F-7 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 1.SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Continued) Materials and Supplies Materials and supplies are carried in inventory at the lower of weighted average cost or market. Property, Plant and Equipment Telephone plant is stated substantially at original cost of construction. Telephone plant retired in the ordinary course of business, together with the cost of removal, less salvage, is charged to accumulated depreciation with no gain or loss recognized. Renewals and betterments of telephone plant are capitalized while repairs, as well as renewals of minor items, are charged to operating expense as incurred. The Company provides for depreciation of telephone plant on the straight-line method, using rates approved by the regulatory authorities. The composite annualized rate of depreciation for all classes of property, plant, and equipment was 7.4%, 7.0%, and 6.6% for 2002, 2001 and 2000, respectively. Non-Telephone plant is stated at purchased cost and, when sold or retired, a gain or loss is recognized. Depreciation of such property is provided on the straight-line method over its estimated service life ranging from two to 20 years. The Company is the lessee of equipment and buildings under capital leases expiring in various years through 2019. The assets and liabilities under capital leases are recorded at the lower of the present value of the minimum lease payments or the fair value of the assets. The assets are amortized over the lower of their related lease terms or their estimated productive lives. Amortization of assets under capital leases is included in depreciation and amortization expense for 2002, 2001 and 2000. Debt Issue Costs Legal, accounting and financing fees, printing costs, and other expenses associated with the issuance of the Company’s senior credit facility, senior subordinated notes, and discount debentures are being amortized using the straight-line method over the term of the debt, which approximates the effective interest method. Amortization expense included in interest expense for 2002, 2001 and 2000 was $4,239, $4,360, and $4,573, respectively. Treasury Stock During 2000, the Company was authorized by its Board of Directors to repurchase up to $10,000 of its common stock, to be completed by December31, 2000. ACS Group acquired 1,532 shares of its common stock for $9,735 under this authorization which has expired. During 2002, the Company was authorized by its Board of Directors to repurchase up to $15,000 of it common stock. As of December31, 2002, ACS Group has acquired 1,205 shares of its common shares for $2,347 under this authorization which expires upon the earlier of expending $15,000 or May15, 2008. The treasury stock is being held for general corporate purposes. Revenue Recognition Substantially all recurring service revenues are billed one month in advance and are deferred until earned. Nonrecurring and usage sensitive revenues are billed in arrears and are recognized when earned. Additionally, the Company establishes estimated bad debt reserves against uncollectible revenues incurred during the period. During 2002 one customer accounted for 11% of consolidated revenues and no other customer accounted for more than 10% of consolidated revenue. During 2001 and 2000, no customer accounted for more than 10% of the consolidated revenues of the Company. F-8 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 1.SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Continued) Revenue Recognition (Continued) In October and November 2001, under two separate regulatory orders, ACSA was authorized to implement interim and refundable rate increases for both loop rental rates on unbundled network elements and for local service revenue. The Company recognized $4,940 and $465 of revenue during 2002 and 2001, respectively, associated with these rate increase authorizations. Management believes that it is unlikely the Company will have a refund obligation associated with these interim rate increases upon final adjudication of rates. Access revenue is recognized when earned. The Company participates in toll revenue pools with other telephone companies. Such pools are funded by toll revenue and/or access charges regulated by the Regulatory Commission of Alaska (“RCA”) within the intrastate jurisdiction and the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) within the interstate jurisdiction. Much of the interstate access revenue is initially recorded based on estimates. These estimates are derived from interim financial statements, available separations studies and the most recent information available about achieved rates of return. These estimates are subject to adjustment in future accounting periods as additional operational information becomes available. To the extent that disputes arise over revenue settlements, the Company’s policy is to defer revenue collected until settlement methodologies are resolved and finalized. During the second quarter of 2002, the Company recognized as revenue $11,066 of previously deferred interstate access revenue and reversed $1,673 of interest expense previously accrued thereon as a result of a favorable ruling by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals related to a dispute on interstate access rates for the Anchorage market. At December31, 2002 and 2001, the Company had liabilities of $20,548 and $31,748, respectively, related to its estimate of refundable access revenue. Income Taxes The Company utilizes the liability method of accounting for income taxes. Under the liability method, deferred taxes reflect the temporary differences between the financial and tax bases of assets and liabilities using the enacted tax rates in effect in the years in which the differences are expected to reverse. Deferred tax assets are reduced by a valuation allowance to the extent that it is more likely than not that such deferred tax assets will not be realized. One of the acquired companies had a remaining unamortized regulatory investment tax credit of $695 at May14, 1999, of which $195 and $197 was amortized against income in 2001 and 2000, respectively. Regulatory Accounting and Regulation The local telephone exchange operations of the Company account for costs in accordance with the accounting principles for regulated enterprises prescribed by Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (“SFAS”) No.71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation. This accounting recognizes the economic effects of rate regulation by recording cost and a return on investment as such amounts are recovered through rates authorized by regulatory authorities. Accordingly, under SFAS No.71, plant and equipment is depreciated over lives approved by regulators and certain costs and obligations are deferred based upon approvals received from regulators to permit recovery of such amounts in future years. Historically, lives approved for regulatory purposes have approximated economically useful lives. On July21, 2002, the Company received an order from the RCA which appears to extend lives approved for rate-making purposes beyond the economically useful lives of the underlying assets. Management petitioned for reconsideration, and the RCA has agreed to take additional testimony. A final order on the matter is not expected until the second quarter of 2003. As of December31, 2002 the Company has deferred as a regulatory asset $894 of costs incurred in connection with regulatory rate making proceedings, which will be amortized in future periods. If the Company were not following SFAS No.71, these costs would have been charged to expense as incurred. Non-regulated revenues and costs incurred by the local telephone exchange operations and non-regulated operations of the Company are not accounted for under SFAS No.71 principles. The local telephone exchange activities of the Company are subject to rate regulation by the FCC for interstate telecommunication service, and the RCA for intrastate and local exchange telecommunication service. The Company, as required by the FCC, accounts for such activity separately. Long distance services of the Company are subject to rate regulation as a non-dominant interexchange carrier by the FCC for interstate telecommunication services and the RCA for intrastate telecommunication services. Wireless, directory and Internet operations are not subject to rate regulation. F-9 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 1.SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Continued) Change in Accounting Estimate During the third quarter of 2002, the Company changed its estimate of the useful lives of certain classes of assets, resulting in additional depreciation expense of $2,206, or $0.07 per share for the year ended December31, 2002. Comprehensive Income (Loss) Comprehensive income (loss)represents net income (loss)plus the results of certain stockholders’ equity changes not reflected in the consolidated statements of operations. For 2002 and 2001, the Company has provided an income tax valuation allowance equal to the income tax benefit resulting from its other comprehensive loss. The Company’s comprehensive loss is equal to its net loss for 2000. Stock Incentive Plans The Company applies Accounting Principles Board Opinion No.25, Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees , in accounting for its stock incentive plans. Accordingly, no compensation cost has been recognized for options with exercise prices equal to or greater than fair value on the date of grant. No compensation costs were charged to operations in 2002, 2001 or 2000. If compensation costs had been determined consistent with SFAS No.123, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation, the Company’s net loss and net loss per share on a pro forma basis for 2002, 2001 and 2000 would have been as follows: Net loss: As reported Pro forma Net loss per share — basic and diluted: As reported Pro forma 2002 2001 2000 $ (185,247 ) $ (11,238 ) $ (25,205 ) (186,702 ) (12,706 ) (26,867 ) $ (5.89 ) $ (0.36 ) $ (0.77 ) (5.93 ) (0.40 ) (0.82 ) The fair value for these options was estimated at the date of grant using a Black-Scholes option pricing model with the following weighted average assumptions for grants: Risk free rate Dividend yield 2002 2001 2000 2.88 % 4.45 % 5.50 % 0.0 % 0.0 % 0.0 % Expected volatility factor 60.8 % 55.2 % 52.5 % Expected option life (years) 6.1 5.9 6.1 Recent Accounting Pronouncements On August15, 2001, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued SFAS No.143 , Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations , which is effective for the Company’s fiscal year beginning January1, 2003. This statement requires, among other things, the accounting and reporting of legal obligations associated with the retirement of long-lived assets that result from the acquisition, construction, development or normal operation of a long-lived asset. Certain amounts included in accumulated depreciation will be redesignated as a regulatory liability. The Company is evaluating, but has not yet determined the impact of the adoption of this standard on its financial position, results of operations and 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. cash flows. Effective January1, 2002, the Company adopted SFAS No.144 , Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets. This statement addresses accounting and reporting of all long-lived assets, except goodwill, that are either held and used or disposed of through sale or other means (see Note 12). F-10 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 1.SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (Continued) Recent Accounting Pronouncements (Continued) In April 2002, FASB issued SFAS No.145, Rescission of FASB Statements No. 4, 44, and 62, Amendment of FASB Statement No.13, and Technical Corrections . SFAS No.145 will generally require gains and losses on extinguishments of debt to be classified as income or loss from continuing operations rather than as extraordinary items as previously required under SFAS No.4. Extraordinary treatment will be required for certain extinguishments as provided in APB Opinion No.30. Accordingly, gains or losses from extinguishments of debt for fiscal years beginning after May15, 2002 will not be reported as extraordinary items unless the extinguishment qualifies as an extraordinary item under the provisions of APB Opinion No.30. Upon adoption, any gain or loss on extinguishment of debt previously classified as an extraordinary item in prior periods presented that does not meet the criteria of APB Opinion No.30 for such classification will be reclassified to conform with the provisions of SFAS No.145. Earlier application of the provisions of SFAS No.145 related to the rescission of SFAS No.4 is encouraged. SFAS No.145 does not have any impact on the Company’s results of operations for the current periods reported. In June 2002, FASB issued SFAS No.146, Accounting for Costs Associated with Exit or Disposal Activities. SFAS No.146 requires companies recognize costs associated with exit or disposal activities when they are incurred rather than at the date of a commitment to an exit or disposal plan. SFAS No.146 is to be applied prospectively to exit or disposal activities initiated after December31, 2002. The Company does not believe the adoption of this statement will have a material impact on its financial position, results of operations, or cash flows. On December31, 2002, FASB issued SFAS No.148, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation—Transition and Disclosure. SFAS No.148 amends SFAS No.123, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation , to provide alternative methods of transition for a voluntary change to the fair value based method of accounting for stock-based employee compensation. In addition, SFAS No.148 amends the disclosure requirements of SFAS No.123 to require prominent disclosures in both annual and interim financial statements about the method of accounting for stock-based employee compensation and the effect of the method used on reported results. The Company does not currently have plans to change to the fair value method of accounting for our stock based compensation. The disclosure requirements are now effective. 2.ACQUISITIONS On September30, 1999, the Company acquired a majority interest in Alaskan Choice Television, L.L.C., (“ACTV”). The cash purchase price was approximately $1,900. On February14, 2000, the Company purchased the remaining one-third interest of ACTV for $3,042, including a $2,250 note payable. This acquisition has been accounted for using the purchase method and its operating results have been included in the consolidated statements of operations from the date of acquisition. On March30, 2002, the Company approved a plan to sell its wireless cable television service segment. As a result of this decision, the operating revenue and expense of this segment has been classified as discontinued operations for all periods presented (See Note 12). On June16, 2000, the Company acquired a 100% interest in Internet Alaska, Inc. It previously held a minority interest of 28.5%. On July6, 2001, The Company acquired the assets and business of Internet Plus. L.L.C., dba MosquitoNet, a Fairbanks based Internet service provider with approximately 5,000 customers. These acquisitions have been accounted for using the purchase method and the operating results from these acquisitions have been included in the consolidated statements of operations from the dates of acquisition. Pro forma information is not provided since the impact of these acquisitions does not have a material effect on the Company’s financial position, results of operations and cash flows. F-11 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 3.ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE Accounts receivable — trade consists of the following at December31, 2002 and 2001: Accounts receivable — trade: Customers Connecting companies Other Less allowance for doubtful accounts Accounts receivable — trade, net 2002 2001 $ 37,638 $ 33,613 12,032 5,225 54,895 6,075 48,820 $ 13,822 4,421 51,856 4,944 46,912 $ 4.PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT Property, plant, and equipment consists of the following at December31, 2002 and 2001: Property, plant, and equipment: Land, buildings and support assets $ 192,832 $ 178,736 2002 2001 Central office switching and transmission Outside plant cable and wire facilities Wireless switching and transmission systems Other Assets held for future use Construction work in progress Less accumulated depreciation and amortization Property, plant and equipment, net 314,316 499,720 51,538 4,393 3,492 24,074 1,090,365 625,276 465,089 $ 309,291 486,352 40,224 2,359 — 19,867 1,036,829 557,849 478,980 $ The following is a summary of property held under capital leases included in the above property, plant and equipment: Property held under capital leases: Land, buildings and support assets Outside plant cable and wire facilities Less accumulated depreciation and amortization Property held under capital leases, net 2002 2001 $ 16,930 $ 13,318 2,710 19,640 6,612 13,028 $ 2,710 16,028 4,810 11,218 $ Amortization of assets under capital leases included in depreciation expense in 2002, 2001 and 2000 is $2,333, $1,202, and $1,008, respectively. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. F-12 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 4.PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT (Continued) The Company leases various land, buildings, right-of-ways, and personal property under operating lease agreements. Rental expenses under operating leases for 2002, 2001 and 2000 were $3,733, $3,971, and $4,055, respectively. Future minimum payments under these leases for the next five years and thereafter are as follows: 2003 $ 2,474 2004 2005 2006 2007 Thereafter 1,971 1,331 1,014 794 1,954 9,538 $ 5.GOODWILL AND OTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS Effective January1, 2002, the Company adopted SFAS No.142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets . In accordance with the guidelines of this accounting principle, goodwill and indefinite-lived intangible assets are no longer amortized but will be assessed for impairment on at least an annual basis. SFAS No.142 also requires that intangible assets with estimable useful lives be amortized over their respective estimated useful lives to their estimated residual values, and reviewed for impairment. Goodwill amortization, which was $7,741 and $7,510 for the years ended December31, 2001 and 2000, respectively, ceased effective January1, 2002. In the first quarter of 2002, pursuant to SFAS No.142, the Company completed its reassessment of previously recognized intangible assets, and ceased amortization of indefinite-lived intangible assets. SFAS No.142 requires that goodwill be tested for impairment at the reporting unit level upon adoption and at least annually thereafter, utilizing a two-step methodology. The initial step requires the Company to determine the fair value of each reporting unit and compare it to the carrying value, including goodwill, of such unit. If the fair value exceeds the carrying value, no impairment loss would be recognized. However, if the carrying value of the reporting unit exceeds its fair value, the goodwill of the unit may be impaired. The amount, if any, of the impairment is then measured in the second step. The Company has determined that its business segments constitute reporting units, with the exception of the Internet segment, which includes two reporting units. Those reporting units are (1)Internet service and (2)IP based private network service. The Company completed the initial step of impairment testing during the second quarter which indicated that goodwill recorded in the local telephone, Internet, and interexchange segments was impaired as of January1, 2002. Due to the potential impairment, the Company then completed the second step of the test to measure the amount of the impairment. The Company determined the fair value of each reporting unit for purposes of this test primarily by using a discounted cash flow valuation technique. Significant estimates used in the valuation include estimates of future cash flows, both future short-term and long-term growth rates, and estimated cost of capital for purposes of arriving at a discount factor. Based on that analysis, a transitional impairment loss of $105,350 was recognized as the cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle in the consolidated statement of operations. The income tax benefit of $39,540 was offset by a valuation allowance. The Company performed its annual impairment test as of the beginning of the fourth quarter of 2002. The Company determined the fair value of each reporting unit for purposes of this test primarily by using a discounted cash flow valuation technique. Significant estimates used in the valuation include estimates of future cash flows, both future short-term and long-term growth rates, and estimated cost of capital for purposes of arriving at a discount factor. Based on comparing this discounted cash flow model to the carrying value of the reporting units, an impairment loss of $64,755 in the local telephone segment was recognized in the consolidated statement of operations for the year ended December31, 2002. The Company attributes the impairment loss in the local telephone segment to competitively biased regulatory policy. On an ongoing basis, the Company expects to perform its annual impairment test during the fourth quarter absent any impairment indicators. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. F-13 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 5. GOODWILL AND OTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS (Continued) In connection with the Company’s adoption of a plan to discontinue its wireless cable television service segment during the first quarter of 2002, the goodwill of that segment was considered impaired, and an impairment charge of $3,165 is included with the results of discontinued operations. The changes in the carrying value of goodwill by segment for the year ended December31, 2002 are as follows: Balance, December31, 2001 Impairment losses included in discontinued operations Impairment losses — transitional Impairment losses — annual test Balance, December31, 2002 Local Telephone 191,351 $ Wireless $ 8,851 Directory 38,831 $ Internet 8,146 $ Interexchange $ 151 All Other 3,165 $ $ Total 250,495 — (97,053 ) (64,755 ) — — — — — — $ 29,543 $ 8,851 $ 38,831 $ — — (3,165 ) (3,165 ) (8,146 ) (151 ) — — — — — (105,350 ) (64,755 ) $ — $ — $ 77,225 Provided below is a reconciliation of previously reported financial statement information to adjusted amounts that reflect the elimination of goodwill and indefinite-lived intangible amortization for the comparable years ended December31, 2001 and 2000 prior to adoption of SFAS No.142: Reported net loss Add back: Goodwill amortization Indefinite-lived intangible amortization Adjusted net loss Loss per share (basic and diluted): Reported net loss Add back: Goodwill amortization Indefinite-lived intangible amortization Adjusted net loss per share 2001 2000 $ (11,238 ) $ (25,205 ) 7,741 528 (2,969 ) $ 7,510 524 (17,171 ) (0.36 ) $ (0.77 ) 0.25 0.02 (0.09 ) $ 0.23 0.01 (0.53 ) $ $ $ The following table provides the gross carrying value and accumulated amortization for each major class of intangible asset as of December31, 2002 based on the Company’s reassessment of previously recognized intangible assets and their remaining amortization lives in accordance with the adoption of SFAS No.142: Gross Carrying Accumulated Amortizable Amount Amortization Life Amortizable intangible assets: 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Customer list Other intangible assets Total amortizable intangible assets Indefinite-lived intangible assets: Cellular licenses PCS licenses Domain names and trade names Total indefinite-lived intangible assets F-14 $ 275 1,593 $ 1,868 5 5 $ $ $ $ 915 2,625 3,540 18,194 3,323 80 21,597 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 5. GOODWILL AND OTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS (Continued) For amortizable intangible assets the total intangible amortization expense for the years ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 was $708, $616 and $525, respectively. The estimated amortization expense for each of the next five years ending December31 is as follows: 2003 $ 951 2004 $ 446 2005 $ 183 2006 $ 92 2007 $ — 6. ACCOUNTS PAYABLE, ACCRUED AND OTHER CURRENT LIABILITIES Accounts payable, accrued and other current liabilities consist of the following at December31, 2002 and 2001: Accounts payable — trade Accrued payroll, benefits, and related liabilities Accrued personal time off Accrued interest Refundable access revenue Other Accounts payable, accrued and other current liabilities 2002 11,435 $ 2001 10,138 $ 6,413 5,200 6,392 9,147 11,209 49,796 $ 8,379 5,207 7,269 22,688 9,400 63,081 $ 7. LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS Long-term obligations consist of the following at December31, 2002 and 2001: Senior credit facility term loan — tranche A Senior credit facility term loan — tranche B Senior credit facility term loan — tranche C 9 3/8% senior subordinated notes due 2009 13% senior discount debentures due 2011 Original issue discount - 13% senior discount debentures due 2011 Capital leases and other long-term obligations Less current portion Long-term obligations, net of current portion 2002 2001 $ 148,500 $ 150,000 148,500 133,650 150,000 17,313 (2,381 ) 12,181 607,763 5,649 602,114 $ 150,000 135,000 150,000 17,313 (2,666 ) 11,603 611,250 4,823 606,427 $ 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. The aggregate maturities of long-term obligations for each of the five years and thereafter subsequent to December31, 2002 are as follows: 2003 $ 5,649 2004 2005 2006 2007 Thereafter 5,775 4,976 147,562 144,624 299,177 607,763 $ F-15 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 7. LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS (Continued) Senior Credit Facility On May14, 1999, the Company entered into a credit agreement with a syndicate of commercial banks which provide the Company’s senior credit facility. The senior credit facility provides $435,000 of term loans and a revolving credit facility with a $75,000 line of credit, of which $430,650 is outstanding at December31, 2002. The Company’s obligations under the senior credit facility are unconditionally and irrevocably guaranteed, joint and severally, by the Company and its subsidiaries, and secured by collateral that includes substantially all of the Company and its subsidiaries’ assets. The senior credit facility contains a number of restrictive covenants and events of default, including covenants limiting capital expenditures, incurrence of debt, and the payment of dividends, and requires the Company to achieve certain financial ratios. During the second quarter of 2002, the Company’s lenders approved an amendment to its senior credit facility that, among other things, permits the Company to repurchase up to $15,000 of its outstanding common stock over the term of the Senior Credit Facility. As of December31, 2002 and 2001 the Company was in compliance with all of the covenants of the senior credit facility. The tranche A term loan of $148,500 is repayable in annual principal payments of $1,500 which commenced on May14, 2002 with the balance due on November14, 2006. The loan bears interest at an annual rate equal (at the Company’s option) to: (1)an adjusted London inter-bank offered rate (“LIBOR”) plus 2.25% or (2)a rate equal to 1.75% plus the greater of the administrative agent’s prime rate, a certificate of deposit rate plus 1.00% or the federal funds rate plus .50%, in each case subject to reduction based on the Company’s financial performance. The rate of interest in effect at December31, 2002 and 2001 was 4.125% and 4.69%, respectively, and is based on the LIBOR rate option. The tranche B term loan of $148,500 is repayable in annual principal payments of $1,500 which commenced on May14, 2002 with the balance due on November14, 2007. The loan bears interest at an annual rate equal (at the Company’s option) to: (1)LIBOR plus 3.00% or (2)a rate equal to 2.00% plus the greater of the administrative agent’s prime rate, a certificate of deposit rate plus 1.00% or the federal funds rate plus .50%. The rate of interest in effect at December31, 2002 and 2001 was 4.88% and 5.44%, respectively, and is based on the LIBOR rate option. The tranche C term loan of $133,650 is repayable in annual principal payments of $1,350 which commenced on May14, 2002 with the balance due on May 14, 2008. The loan bears interest at an annual rate equal (at the Company’s option) to: (1)LIBOR plus 3.25% or (2)a rate equal to 2.25% plus the greater of the administrative agent’s prime rate, a certificate of deposit rate plus 1.00% or the federal funds rate plus .50%. The rate of interest in effect at December31, 2002 and 2001 was 5.06% and 7.06%, respectively, and is based on the LIBOR rate option. The senior credit facility also provides a revolving credit facility in the amount of $75,000 which is available, in part, for up to $25,000 in letters of credit and up to $10,000 in the form of swingline loans. This revolving facility is available through May15, 2006 and outstanding balances thereunder will bear interest at an annual interest rate option equivalent to that provided under tranche A. There were no amounts outstanding under this revolving credit facility as of December31, 2002 and 2001. On July24, 1999 the Company entered into an interest rate swap agreement to reduce the impact of changes in interest rates on its floating rate long-term debt. This agreement fixed at 5.99% the underlying variable rate on one-half of the borrowings under the senior credit facility, or $217,500, expiring in June 2004. The differential to be paid or received is recorded as interest expense in the consolidated statement of operations in the period in which it is recognized. The Company is exposed to credit losses from counterparty nonperformance, but does not anticipate any such nonperformance. Senior Subordinated Notes On May14, 1999, the Company issued $150,000 in aggregate principal amount of 9 3/8 % senior subordinated notes due 2009. Interest on the notes is payable semi-annually on May15 and November15. The notes will mature on May15, 2009, and are redeemable, in whole or in part, at the option of the Company, at any time on or after May15, 2004 at 104.688% of the principal amount declining to 100% of the principal amount on or after May15, 2007. The notes contain a number of restrictive covenants, including covenants limiting incurrence of debt and the payment of dividends. As of December31, 2002 and 2001 the Company was in compliance with all the covenants of the notes. F-16 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 7. LONG-TERM OBLIGATIONS (Continued) Senior Discount Debentures On May14, 1999 the Company issued senior discount debentures due May15, 2011. Interest accrues at 13.00% and is payable at the Company’s option semiannually on May15 and November15, commencing May15, 2000 until May15, 2004 when the Company will be required to semiannually pay interest. The outstanding debentures are redeemable, in whole or in part, at the option of the Company, at any time on or after May15, 2004 at 106.5% of the principal amount declining to 100% of the principal amount on or after May15, 2009. The debentures contain a number of restrictive covenants, including covenants limiting incurrence of debt and the payment of dividends. As of December31, 2002 and 2001 the Company was in compliance with all the covenants of the debentures. Capital leases and other long-term obligations The Company has entered into various capital leases and other debt agreements totaling $12,181 and $11,603 with a weighted average interest rate of 8.05% and 8.74% at December31, 2002 and 2001, respectively. 8. OTHER DEFERRED CREDITS AND LONG-TERM LIABILITIES: Deferred credits and other long-term liabilities consist of the following at December31, 2002 and 2001: Refundable access revenue Interest rate swap, marked to market Additional pension liability Other deferred credits Total deferred credits and other long-term liabilities 2002 $ 11,401 $ 2001 9,060 14,152 6,285 1,092 32,930 $ 11,437 4,147 359 25,003 $ 9. LOCAL TELEPHONE OPERATING REVENUE Local telephone operating revenues consisted of the following for the years ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000: Local network service Network access revenue Deregulated revenue and other Total local telephone operating revenues 2002 2001 2000 $ 99,512 $ 96,270 $ 94,098 108,335 18,600 226,447 $ 102,977 22,164 221,411 105,172 22,998 222,268 $ $ F-17 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 10. UNUSUAL CHARGES During 2000, the Company recorded $5,288 of unusual charges, consisting of the following: Costs incurred in attempted acquisition Severance and restructuring costs Legal settlement 2000 1,451 3,019 818 5,288 $ $ During 2000, the Company attempted to acquire the Matanuska Telephone Association, a cooperative telephone association located in Alaska. The acquisition was subject to approval by a vote of the membership of the cooperative association requiring a super majority, which was held in September of 2000. The membership of the association voted to approve the acquisition but failed to achieve the required super majority. The Company had incurred $1,451 of legal, consulting and other out of pocket costs associated with the attempted acquisition which were charged to expense during September 2000. The Company also recorded $3,019 related to severance and restructuring charges under several plans adopted during 2000. In December 2000, the Company settled out of court a claim by a vendor that arose from an undisclosed contractual obligation it incurred in the purchase of the Company’s operations in May 1999, resulting in a charge to expense of $818. 11. INCOME TAXES The Company’s combined federal income and state effective income tax rate from continuing operations was a benefit of 0.0%, 1.7%, and 0.8% in 2002, 2001 and 2000, respectively. The difference between taxes calculated as if the statutory federal rate of 34% was applied to loss from continuing operations before income tax and the recorded tax benefit is reconciled as follows: Computed federal income taxes at the 34% statutory rate Increase (reduction)in tax resulting from: State income taxes (net federal benefit) Original issue discount interest Amortization of investment tax credits Prior year adjustment Other Valuation allowance — book net operating loss Total income tax benefit The benefit for income taxes is summarized as follows: 2002 $ (24,570 ) $ 2001 (3,303 ) $ 2000 (8,579 ) (4,144 ) 194 — 313 495 27,712 $ — $ (628 ) 182 (195 ) — 277 3,472 (195 ) $ (1,438 ) 211 (197 ) — (31 ) 9,837 (197 ) Current: Federal income tax State income tax Deferred: Total current 2002 2001 2000 $ — $ — $ — — — — — — — 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Federal income tax State income tax Total deferred Amortization of investment tax credits — — — — — — — — — — (195 ) (197 ) Total income tax benefit $ — $ (195 ) $ (197 ) F-18 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 11. INCOME TAXES (Continued) The effect of significant items comprising the Company’s net deferred tax liability at 34% were as follows: Deferred tax liabilities — long-term: Property, plant and equipment $ (20,786 ) $ (20,380 ) $ (16,338 ) 2002 2001 2000 Intangibles Other Total long-term deferred tax liabilities Deferred tax assets: Current: Accrued compensation Accrued bad debts Interest rate swap mark to market Minimum pension liability adjustment Other Total current deferred tax assets Long-term: Net operating loss carryforwards from operations Intangibles Debt issuance cost Original issue discount Total long-term deferred tax assets Total deferred tax assets Valuation allowance Net deferred tax asset — (88 ) (20,874 ) (13,105 ) — (33,485 ) (7,235 ) (169 ) (23,742 ) 4,249 2,827 5,661 1,893 987 15,617 58,728 46,734 1,335 — 106,797 122,414 (101,540 ) 4,081 2,172 4,575 957 622 12,407 50,284 — — — 50,284 62,691 (29,206 ) $ — $ — $ 5,329 4,825 — — 150 10,304 32,598 — — 503 33,101 43,405 (19,513 ) 150 The company has available at December31, 2002 unused operating loss carryforwards of $146,819 that may be applied against future taxable income and that expire as shown below. Per the schedule below the total Net Operating Loss (“NOL”) is made up of NOLs generated by the consolidated group and NOLs obtained with the 2000 acquisition of Internet Alaska. The Internet Alaska NOLs are limited by special rules known as Separate Return Limitation Year (“SRLY”) rules. SRLY NOLs can only be used in years that both the Consolidated Group and the entity that created the SRLY NOLs have taxable income. The tax benefits derived from the utilization of the SRYL NOLs will increase retained earnings. Year of Expiration 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Internet Alaska's $ SRLY 27 328 852 2,631 — — $ 3,838 Unused Operating Unused Operating Total Loss Carryforwards $ Loss Carryforwards $ — 42 18,413 54,144 48,354 22,028 142,981 27 370 19,265 56,775 48,354 22,028 146,819 $ $ F-19 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 12. DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS On March30, 2002, the Company approved a plan to sell its wireless cable television service segment. As a result of this decision, the operating revenue and expense of this segment has been classified as discontinued operations under SFAS No.144, Accounting for the Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets, for all periods presented and the assets and liabilities of the disposal group have been written down to their fair value, net of expected selling expense. The income tax benefit in all years was offset by a valuation allowance. The following discloses the results of the discontinued operations for years ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000: Operating revenue Operating expense Operating loss Interest expense Other Loss from operations of discontinued segment 2002 2001 $ 716 $ 960 $ 2000 1,131 1,255 (539 ) 2,555 (1,595 ) 1,968 (837 ) (33 ) (126 ) (151 ) — (572 ) 3 (1,718 ) 71 (917 ) Write down of net assets to fair value Loss from discontinued operations (7,060 ) (7,632 ) $ — (1,718 ) $ — (917 ) $ Assets held for sale December31, 2002 consist of the following: Accounts receivable, net of allowance of $42 Other current assets Property, plant and equipment Intangible assets Current liabilities Assets held for sale F-20 $ 50 7 201 85 (82 ) 261 $ 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents 13. EARNINGS PER SHARE ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) Earnings per share is based on weighted average number of shares of common stock and dilutive common stock equivalents outstanding. Basic earnings per share includes no dilution and is computed by dividing income available to common shareholders by the weighted average number of common shares outstanding for the period. Diluted earnings per share reflects the potential dilution of securities that could share in the earnings of an entity. The Company includes dilutive stock options based on the treasury stock method. Due to the Company’s reported net losses, common equivalent shares, which consisted of 3,606 and 3,998 options granted to employees, were anti-dilutive for the years ended December31, 2001 and 2000, respectively. The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted earnings per share for the years ending December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000. Numerator: Loss from continuing operations Loss from discontinued operations Loss before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net loss Denominator: Weighted average shares outstanding — basic Dilutive potential common shares — stock options Weighted average shares outstanding — diluted Basic earnings per share: Loss from continuing operations Loss from discontinued operations Loss before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net loss Diluted earnings per share: Loss from continuing operations Loss from discontinued operations Loss before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net loss F-21 2002 2001 2000 $ (72,265 ) $ (9,520 ) $ (24,288 ) (7,632 ) (79,897 ) (105,350 ) (185,247 ) $ (1,718 ) (11,238 ) — (11,238 ) $ (917 ) (25,205 ) — (25,205 ) 31,464 10 31,474 31,523 — 31,523 32,654 — 32,654 (2.30 ) $ (0.30 ) $ (0.74 ) (0.24 ) (2.54 ) (3.35 ) (5.89 ) $ (0.06 ) (0.36 ) — (0.36 ) $ (0.03 ) (0.77 ) — (0.77 ) (2.30 ) $ (0.30 ) $ (0.74 ) (0.24 ) (2.54 ) (3.35 ) (5.89 ) $ (0.06 ) (0.36 ) — (0.36 ) $ (0.03 ) (0.77 ) — (0.77 ) $ $ $ $ $ 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 14. STOCK INCENTIVE PLANS Under various plans, ACS Group, through the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors, may grant stock options, stock appreciation rights and other awards to officers, employees and non-employee directors. At December31, 2002, ACS Group has reserved a total of 6,060 shares of authorized common stock for issuance under the plans. In general, options under the plans vest ratably over three, four or five years and the plans terminate in approximately 10 years. On April3, 2002, ACS Group merged the ALEC Holdings, Inc. 1999 Stock Incentive Plan into the Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 1999 Stock Incentive Plan. Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 1999 Stock Incentive Plan ACS Group has reserved 4,910 shares under this plan, which was adopted by the Company in November 1999. At December31, 2002, 5,712 options have been granted, 1,897 have been forfeited, 441 have been exercised, and 1,095 shares are available for grant under the plan. Information on outstanding options for the years ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 is summarized as follows: Outstanding, January 1 Granted Exercised Canceled or expired Outstanding, December 31 Options exercisable at December 31 Weighted average fair value of options granted 2002 2001 2000 Number of Shares 3,606 278 (76 ) (434 ) 3,374 2,632 Weighted Average Exercise Price $ 7.47 7.82 6.08 8.13 7.52 7.33 4.57 Number of Shares 3,998 260 (128 ) (524 ) 3,606 2,208 Weighted Average Exercise Price $ 7.55 6.81 6.03 8.43 7.47 7.11 3.93 Number of Shares 3,154 1,752 (198 ) (710 ) 3,998 1,728 $ Weighted Average Exercise Price 6.15 10.03 6.96 7.92 7.55 6.72 5.66 The outstanding options at December31, 2002 have the following characteristics: Range of Exercise Prices $5.50 - $8.00 $8.58 - $12.63 $14.20 Number of Shares 2,812 18 544 Outstanding Options Exercisable Options Weighted Average Exercise Price 6.19 12.63 14.20 $ Number Exercisable 2,224 12 396 Weighted Average Exercise Price 6.08 12.63 14.20 $ Weighted Average Remaining Life (Years) 6.39 7.47 7.12 F-22 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 14. STOCK INCENTIVE PLANS (Continued) ACS Group, Inc. 1999 Non-Employee Director Stock Compensation Plan The non-employee director stock compensation plan was adopted by ACS Group in November 1999. ACS Group has reserved 150 shares under this plan. At December31, 2002, 110 shares have been awarded and 40 shares are available for grant under the plan. For the years ended December31, 2002, 2001, and 2000, directors were required to receive not less than 25% of their annual retainer and meeting fees in the form of ACS Group’s stock, and may have elected to receive up to 100% of director’s compensation in the form of stock. Starting in 2003, directors no longer have the option of receiving stock and will receive all of their annual retainer and meeting fees in cash. During the year ended December31, 2002, 58 shares under the plan were awarded to directors, of which 34 were elected to be deferred until termination of service by the directors. During the year ended December31, 2001, 26 shares under the plan were awarded to directors, of which 19 were elected to be deferred until termination of service by the directors. During the year ended December31, 2000, 26 shares under the plan were awarded to directors, of which 13 were elected to be deferred until termination of service by the directors. Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 1999 Employee Stock Purchase Plan This plan was also adopted by ACS Group in November 1999. ACS Group has reserved 1,000 shares under this plan. At December31, 2002, 632 shares are available for issuance and sale. The plan will terminate on December31, 2009. All ACS Group employees and all of the employees of designated subsidiaries generally will be eligible to participate in the purchase plan, other than employees whose customary employment is 20 hours or less per week or is for not more than five months in a calendar year, or who are ineligible to participate due to restrictions under the Internal Revenue Code. On December31, 2002, 97 shares were issued under the plan. On June30, 2002, 53 shares were issued under the plan. On December31, 2001, 38 shares were issued under the plan. On June29, 2001, 48 shares were issued under the plan. On December29, 2000, 67 shares were issued under the plan. On June30, 2000, 65 shares were issued under the plan. A participant in the purchase plan may authorize regular salary deductions of a maximum of 15% and a minimum of 1% of base compensation. The fair market value of shares which may be purchased by any employee during any calendar year may not exceed $25. The amounts so deducted and contributed are applied to the purchase of full shares of common stock at 85% of the lesser of the fair market value of such shares on the date of purchase or on the offering date for such offering period. The offering dates are January 1 and July 1 of each purchase plan year, and each offering period will consist of one six-month purchase period. The first offering period under the plan commenced on January1, 2000. Shares are purchased on the open market or issued from authorized but unissued shares on behalf of participating employees on the last business days of June and December for each purchase plan year and each such participant has the rights of a stockholder with respect to such shares. During the year ended December31, 2002 approximately 15% of eligible employees elected to participate in the plan. 15. RETIREMENT PLANS Pension benefits for substantially all of the Company’s employees are provided through the Alaska Electrical Pension Plan (“AEPP”). The Company pays a contractual hourly amount based on employee classification or base compensation. As a multi-employer defined contribution plan, the accumulated benefits and plan assets are not determined for or allocated separately to the individual employer. The Company’s portion of the plan’s pension cost for 2002, 2001 and 2000 was $13,390, $11,830, and $10,978, respectively. The Company also provides a 401(k) retirement savings plan covering substantially all of its employees. The plan allows for discretionary matching contributions as determined by the Board of Directors, subject to Internal Revenue Code limitations. There was no matching contribution for 2002, 2001 or 2000. F-23 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 15. RETIREMENT PLANS (Continued) The Company also has a separate defined benefit plan that covers certain employees previously employed by Century Telephone Enterprise, Inc. (“CenturyTel Plan”). This plan was transferred to the Company in connection with the acquisition of CenturyTel’s Alaska Properties. Existing plan assets and liabilities of the CenturyTel Plan were transferred to the ACS Retirement Plan on September1, 1999. Accrued benefits under the ACS Retirement Plan were determined in accordance with the provisions of the CenturyTel Plan. Upon completion of the transfer to the Company, covered employees ceased to accrue benefits under the plan. On November1, 2000 the ACS Retirement Plan was amended to conform early retirement reduction factors and various other terms to those provided by the AEPP. As a result of this amendment, prior service cost of $1,992 was recorded and will be amortized over the expected service life of the plan participants at the date of the amendment. The Company uses the traditional unit credit method for the determination of pension cost for financial reporting and funding purposes and complies with the funding requirements under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”). Since the plan is adequately funded under ERISA, no contribution was made in 2002, 2001 or 2000. The following table represents the net periodic pension expense (benefit) for the ACS Retirement Plan for 2002, 2001 and 2000: Interest cost 2002 2001 2000 $ 680 $ 627 $ 447 Expected return on plan assets (723 ) (773 ) (813 ) Amortization of gain/loss Amortization of prior year service costs Net periodic pension expense (benefit) 260 203 420 $ 30 203 87 $ — 34 (332 ) $ The following is a reconciliation of the beginning and ending balances for 2002 and 2001 for the projected benefit obligation and the plan assets of the ACS Retirement Plan: Change in projected benefit obligation: Projected benefit obligation at beginning of year $ 9,108 $ 8,600 2002 2001 Amortization of prior service cost Interest cost Actuarial loss Benefits paid Projected benefit obligation at end of year Change in plan assets Fair value of plan assets at beginning of year Return on plan assets Benefits paid Fair value of plan assets at end of year (203 ) 680 1,279 (249 ) 10,615 $ (203 ) 627 215 (131 ) 9,108 8,736 $ 9,257 (803 ) (249 ) 7,684 $ (390 ) (131 ) 8,736 $ $ $ The following table represents the funded status of the ACS Retirement Plan at December31, 2001 and 2000: Projected benefit obligation 2002 $ (10,615 ) $ 2001 (9,108 ) 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Plan assets at fair value Funded Status Unrecognized prior service cost Unrecognized net loss Net amount recognized 7,684 (2,931 ) 1,551 4,734 3,354 $ 8,736 (372 ) 1,755 2,392 3,775 $ F-24 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 15. RETIREMENT PLANS (Continued) The net amounts recognized in the balance sheet were classified as follows at December31, 2002 and 2001: Accrued benefit liability Intangible asset Accumulated other comprehensive income Net amount recognized 2002 (2,931 ) $ 2001 (372 ) 1,551 4,734 3,354 $ 1,755 2,392 3,775 $ $ The actuarial assumptions used to account for the plan as of December31, 2002 and 2001 are as follows: Discount rate Expected return on assets 2002 2001 6.75 % 7.25 % 8.50 % 8.50 % Rate of compensation increase 0.00 % 0.00 % The Company also has a separate executive post retirement health benefit plan. The Alaska Communications Systems Executive Retiree Health Benefit Plan (“The ACS Health Plan”) was adopted by the Company in November 2001 and amended in October 2002. The ACS Health Plan covers a select group of management or highly compensated employees. The group of eligible employees is selected by a committee appointed by the Compensation Committee of ACS Group’s Board of Directors. Each eligible employee must complete 10years of service and be employed by the Company in the capacity of an executive officer for a minimum of 36 consecutive months immediately preceding retirement. The ACS Health Plan provides a graded subsidy for medical, dental, and vision coverage. The amendment revised the premium subsidy, added a premium subsidy cap and suspends retirees’ benefits from the ACS Health Plan during any period the retiree has access to employer health benefits. The Company uses the projected unit credit method for the determination of post retirement health cost for financial reporting and funding purposes and complies with the funding requirements under ERISA. The Company made a contribution of $128 to the ACS Health Plan during 2001. The following represents the net periodic postretirement benefit expense for the ACS Health Plan for 2002 and 2001: Service cost Interest cost Expected return on plan assets Amortization of prior service cost Net periodic postretirement benefit expense $ 2002 69 $ 2001 1 1 40 6 (11 ) — 24 122 $ $ 4 2 1 F-25 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 15. RETIREMENT PLANS (Continued) The following is a reconciliation of the beginning and ending balanced for 2002 and 2001 for the projected benefit obligation and the plan assets for the ACS Health Plan: Change in accumulated postretirement benefit obligation: Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation at beginning of the year: $ 588 $ — 2002 2001 Plan adoption Plan amendment Service cost Interest cost Actuarial (gain)/loss Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation at end of the year: $ — 586 (440 ) — 11 6 (15 ) 588 69 40 11 268 $ Change in plan assets: Fair value of plan assets at beginning of year Employer contributions Return on plan assets Fair value of plan assets at end of year $ 128 $ — — 128 (1 ) — 128 127 $ $ The following table represents the funded status of the ACS Health Plan at December31, 2002 and 2001: Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation Plan assets at fair value Funded status Unrecognized prior service cost Unrecognized net (gain)or loss Prepaid (accrued)benefit costs 2002 2001 $ (268 ) $ (588 ) 127 (141 ) 128 (460 ) 118 7 582 (15 ) $ (16 ) $ 107 The actuarial assumptions used to account for the ACS Health Plan as of December31, 2002 and 2001 is an assumed discount rate of 6.75% and 7.25%, respectively, and an expected long term rate of return on plan assets of 8.50%. For measurement purposes, the assumed annual rates of increases in health care costs is as follows: Year 1 2 3 4 5 and thereafter Pre 65 premiums 7.00 % 7.00 % 7.00 % 7.00 % 7.00 % Post 65 premiums 10.00 % 9.00 % 8.00 % 7.00 % 7.00 % 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Assumed health care cost trend rates have a significant effect on the amounts reported for the ACS Health Plan. A one-percentage-point change in assumed health care cost trend rates would have the following effects for 2002: Effect on total of service and interest cost components Effect on accumulated postretirement benefit obligation 1% 13 71 -1% (12 ) (64 ) F-26 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents 16. BUSINESS SEGMENTS ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) The Company has five reportable segments: local telephone, wireless, directory, Internet and interexchange. Local telephone provides landline telecommunications services, and consists of local telephone service, network access and deregulated and other revenue; wireless provides wireless telecommunications service; directory provides yellow page advertising and other related products; Internet provides Internet service and advanced IP based private networks; and interexchange provides switched and dedicated long distance services. Each reportable segment is a strategic business under separate management and offering different services than those offered by the other segments. The Company also has a wireless cable television service segment that did not meet the criteria for a reportable segment and was previously included in “All Other” that is now reported as discontinued operations. The Company also incurs interest expense, interest income, equity in earnings of investments, goodwill amortization in 2001 and 2000 on the original May14, 1999 purchases, goodwill impairment losses and other operating and non operating income and expense at the corporate level which are not allocated to the business segments, nor are they evaluated by the chief operating decision maker in analyzing the performance of the business segments. These non operating income and expense items are provided in the accompanying table under the caption “All Other” in order to assist the users of these financial statements in reconciling the operating results and total assets of the business segments to the consolidated financial statements. Common use assets are held at either the Company or ACS Holdings and are allocated to the business segments based on operating revenue. Included in the caption “All Other” are also the net assets held for sale of $261 and other net liabilities of the discontinued operation that would not be sold of $5,941. The accounting policies of the segments are the same as those described in the summary of significant accounting policies. The following table illustrates selected financial data for each segment as of and for the year ended December31, 2002: Operating revenues $ 226,447 $ 43,233 $ 33,604 $ 20,848 $ 29,708 $ 24,807 $ (35,145 ) $ 343,502 Local Telephone Wireless Directory Internet Interexchange All Other Eliminations Total Depreciation and amortization Operating income (loss) Interest expense Interest income Income tax provision (benefit) Income (loss)from continuing operations Total assets Capital expenditures 55,498 32,005 435 3 13,214 19,199 5,541 3,647 (5 ) 3 1,527 11 6,744 2,256 12,890 — 82,940 19,404 (21,468 ) (1,250 ) (55,026 ) (76 ) (22,764 ) — — 7,985 (146 ) — — (330 ) 2 — (51,658 ) 2,416 (22,726 ) — — — (51,704 ) 2,424 — 2,113 11,419 (21,619 ) (1,583 ) (81,718 ) (76 ) (72,265 ) 524,322 31,186 83,601 14,007 110,208 — (27,156 ) 16,604 7,412 228 3,233 9,439 — — 701,620 71,464 Operating revenues disclosed above include intersegment operating revenues of $22,634 for local telephone, $1,786 for wireless, $1,400 for directory and $13,965 for interexchange. In accordance with SFAS No.71, intercompany revenues between local telephone and non-local telephone operations are not eliminated above. The following table illustrates selected financial data for each segment as of and for the year ended December31, 2001: Operating revenues $ 221,411 $ 41,923 $ 33,870 $ 13,726 $ 30,795 $ 17,072 $ (26,582 ) $ 332,215 Local Telephone Wireless Directory Internet Interexchange All Other Eliminations Total Depreciation and amortization Operating income (loss) Interest expense Interest income 53,242 34,794 (1,716 ) 13 5,626 5,084 (36 ) 14 1,048 2,606 2,284 18,110 (9,504 ) (1,752 ) — — (97 ) — (302 ) — 14,302 391 (58,006 ) 1,963 — — — — 79,108 47,123 (60,157 ) 1,990 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Income tax provision (benefit) Income (loss)from continuing operations Total assets Capital expenditures 13,534 19,560 652,481 45,635 2,164 2,966 7,453 — — (23,346 ) 10,657 (9,591 ) (2,049 ) (31,063 ) 106,851 5,786 87,937 21 3,622 16,319 28,758 19,787 21,865 34 — — — — (195 ) (9,520 ) 901,514 87,582 F-27 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 16. BUSINESS SEGMENTS (Continued) Operating revenues disclosed above include intersegment operating revenues of $21,677 for local telephone, $1,603 for wireless, $ 1,400 for directory, $2 for Internet and $13,851 for interexchange. In accordance with SFAS No.71, intercompany revenues between local telephone and non-local telephone operations are not eliminated above. The following table illustrates selected financial data for each segment as of and for the year ended December31, 2000: Operating revenues $ 222,268 $ 41,205 $ 29,156 $ 9,172 $ 19,773 $ 16,609 $ (24,656 ) $ 313,527 Local Telephone Wireless Directory Internet Interexchange All Other Eliminations Total Depreciation and amortization Operating income (loss) Interest expense Interest income Income tax provision (benefit) Income (loss)from continuing operations Total assets Capital expenditures 56,912 31,751 (1,046 ) 105 7,913 22,814 5,029 6,414 (11 ) 215 2,703 3,944 1,046 1,495 1,345 5,928 13,958 (8,760 ) (1,325 ) (8,270 ) — — 5,746 8,212 (109 ) — — (312 ) — — (63,081 ) 6,498 (16,559 ) (8,863 ) (1,631 ) (48,764 ) 633,799 53,974 106,878 11,505 71,465 — 25,070 3,252 43,568 3,030 27,505 492 — — — — — — — — 71,755 33,768 (64,559 ) 6,818 (197 ) (24,288 ) 908,285 72,253 Operating revenues disclosed above include intersegment operating revenues of $9,840 for local telephone, $937 for wireless, $2 for Internet and $13,208 for interexchange. In accordance with SFAS No.71, intercompany revenues between local telephone and non-local telephone operations are not eliminated above. 17. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS Fox Paine Company, ACS Group’s majority stockholder, receives an annual management fee in the amount of 1% of the Company’s net income before interest expense, interest income, income taxes, depreciation and amortization, and equity in loss of investments, calculated without regard to the fee. The management fee expense for 2002, 2001 and 2000 was $1,316, $1,285, and $1,169, respectively. The management fee payable at 2002 and 2001 was $1,319 and $1,303, respectively. On April17, 2001, the Company issued an interest bearing note receivable to an officer totaling $328. The note bears interest at the Mid-Term Applicable Federal Rate, which was 3.26% as of December31, 2002, and is due on April15, 2005. The note is secured by a pledge of 100 shares of ACS Group’s stock held in the officer’s name. In accordance with an addendum to the officer’s employment agreement dated May3, 2001, the loan will be forgiven ratably over a three year period on its anniversary date ending on April16, 2004. Accordingly, $114 was forgiven on April16, 2002 and recognized as compensation expense. The note balance, including accrued interest, was $235 and $339 as of December31, 2002 and 2001, respectively. 18. ACCOUNTING FOR DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS AND HEDGING ACTIVITIES Commencing January1, 2001, The Company adopted SFAS No.133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities and its corresponding amendments under SFAS No.138, Accounting for Certain Derivative Instruments and Certain Hedging Activities . SFAS No.133 requires that an entity recognize all derivatives as either assets or liabilities on the balance sheet and measure those instruments at fair value. The accounting for changes in fair value of a derivative depends on the intended use of the derivative, and its designation as a hedge. Derivatives that are not hedges must be adjusted to fair value through earnings. If a derivative is a hedge, depending on the nature of the hedge, changes in fair value of derivatives either offset the change in fair value of the hedged assets, liabilities, or firm commitments through earnings, or are recognized in other comprehensive income until the hedged transaction is recognized in earnings. The change in a derivative’s fair value related to the ineffective portion of a hedge, if any, is immediately recognized in earnings. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. F-28 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 18. ACCOUNTING FOR DERIVATIVE INSTRUMENTS AND HEDGING ACTIVITIES (Continued) As a result of adopting SFAS No.133, the Company recognized as an asset at January1, 2001, a cumulative transition adjustment of $1,243 related to marking to fair value a designated cash flow hedge in the form of a interest rate swap. The cumulative unrealized gain from the transition adjustment was recorded as a credit to other comprehensive income within the Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity. As of December31, 2002 and 2001, the fair value of the swap has declined to a liability of $14,152 and $11,437, respectively, which is recorded in other deferred credits and long-term liabilities on the Company’s Consolidated Balance Sheets. The fair value of the Company’s interest rate swap agreement represents the estimated amount the Company would receive or pay to terminate the agreement, calculated based on the present value of expected payments or receipts based on implied forward rates in the LIBOR yield curve at the end of the year. The realized gains and losses of the swap and its associated hedged long-term debt are recorded net in interest expense on the Company’s Consolidated Statements of Operations. For the years ended December31, 2002 and 2001, realized changes in the fair value of the cash flow hedge amounted to a charge of $9,046 and $3,653, of which the ineffective portion was $59 and $247, respectively. Both the realized effective and ineffective components of the cash flow hedge were recorded as an increase to interest expense. Assuming a weighted average variable rate based on implied forward rates in the LIBOR yield curve as of December31, 2002, $10,040 would be charged to earnings as interest expense as a result of projected realized changes in fair value of the cash flow hedge expected to occur in 2003. The swap agreement currently in place expires on June24, 2004. The Company maintains an interest rate risk management strategy as a condition of its bank credit agreement that uses derivatives to minimize significant, unanticipated earnings and cash flow fluctuations caused by interest rate volatility. The Company’s specific goals are (1)to manage interest rate sensitivity by modifying the repricing characteristics of certain of its debt and (2)to lower (where possible) the cost of borrowed funds. The Company does not enter into derivative financial instruments for speculative or trading purposes. By using derivative financial instruments to hedge exposure to changes in interest rates, the Company exposes itself to credit risk and market risk. The Company has minimized its credit risk by entering into a transaction with a high-quality counterparty and monitoring the financial condition of that counterparty. Market risk is managed through the setting and monitoring of parameters that limit the types and degree of market risks that are acceptable. 19. FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS The fair values of cash and short-term investments, accounts receivable and payable, and other short-term assets and liabilities approximate carrying values due to their short-term nature. The Company’s interest rate swap agreement is marked to fair value, therefore its carrying value is equal to its fair value. The fair value for the Company’s senior subordinated notes was estimated based on quoted market prices. The fair value of the Company’s senior credit facility term debt approximates carrying values due to the variable interest rate nature of the debt and its senior position in the capital structure. The fair value of the Company’s senior discount debentures is estimated based on market interest rates currently available to the Company. The following table summarizes the Company’s carrying values and fair values of the debt components of its financial instruments at December31, 2002: Senior credit facility term debt — tranche A Senior credit facility term debt — tranche B Senior credit facility term debt — tranche C 9 3/8% senior subordinated notes due 2009 13% senior discount debentures due 2011 Capital leases and other long-term obligations Carrying Value Fair Value $ 148,500 $ 148,500 148,500 133,650 150,000 14,932 12,181 607,763 148,500 133,650 107,250 21,316 12,181 571,397 $ $ 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. F-29 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 19. FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS (Continued) The following table summarizes the Company’s carrying values and fair values of the debt components of its financial instruments at December31, 2001: Senior credit facility term debt — tranche A Senior credit facility term debt — tranche B Senior credit facility term debt — tranche C 9 3/8% senior subordinated notes due 2009 13% senior discount debentures due 2011 Capital leases and other long-term obligations Carrying Value Fair Value $ 150,000 $ 150,000 150,000 135,000 150,000 14,647 11,603 611,250 150,000 135,000 148,500 21,212 11,603 616,315 $ $ 20. SEVERANCE AND RESTRUCTURING CHARGES In June 2002, the Company adopted a restructuring plan and recorded $862 of associated charges, including $523 of severance costs and $339 of lease termination costs for office space. Employee force reductions expected as a result of this plan total approximately 30 persons, and the plan is expected to be completed by June 2003. As of December31, 2002, 11 employees have been terminated and are eligible for severance and the Company has paid out $172 accrued under this plan. 21. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES The Company is involved in various claims, legal actions and regulatory proceedings arising in the ordinary course of business. The Company believes that the disposition of these matters will not have a material adverse effect on the Company’s consolidated financial position, results of operations or cash flows. A class action lawsuit was filed against the Company on March14, 2001. The litigation alleges various contract and tort claims concerning the Company’s decision to terminate its Infinite Minutes long distance plan. Although the Company believes this suit is without merit and intends to vigorously defend its position, it is impossible to determine at this time the actual number of plaintiffs or the claims that will actually continue to be in dispute. In December 2001, the Company entered into a material contract with the State of Alaska to provide it with comprehensive telecommunications services for a period of five years. This contract obligates the Company to, among other things, provide on the state’s behalf customer premise equipment and other capital assets which the Company believes will range between $25,000 and $30,000 over the term of the agreement, of which approximately $12,400 has been expended through December31, 2002. The Company intends to fund this commitment with cash on hand and cash flows from operations. On July15, 2002 the Company fulfilled a commitment to Neptune Communications, L.L.C. (“Neptune”) to provide a loan in the form of an unsecured note receivable totaling $15,000 in return for certain consideration. The note, which is included in deferred charges and other assets on the Company’s Consolidated Balance Sheets, bears interest at the applicable federal rate, which was 5.61% at the date of issuance, and matures on July15, 2022. Interest is payable semiannually, but Neptune may elect to add the interest to the principal in lieu of cash payments. The commitment was funded with cash on hand. In connection with this note, Neptune has granted the Company an option to purchase certain network assets of Neptune, no later than January2, 2006 at a price equal to the then outstanding loan balance. The Company has also entered into a strategic agreement with Neptune for the life of the fiber optic cable system owned by Neptune. The significant provisions of this agreement are: i) purchase commitments by the Company for capacity in 2005 and 2007, the final price and quantity of which are subject to future events, ii) Neptune’s restoration of the Company’s traffic carried on another cable system, iii) and specific interconnection arrangements between the Company and Neptune, should the Company exercise its option to purchase certain network assets from Neptune. The Company is 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. currently renegotiating the terms and conditions of this agreement and it is not possible to determine the ultimate outcome of these negotiations at this time. F-30 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 21. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (Continued) The Company has been authorized by its Board of Directors to evaluate the possible disposition of its directory business, ACSIS. This transaction, if completed, would result in a de-leveraging of the Company’s balance sheet and generate cash for other corporate objectives. The Company expects to file on or about March6, 2003, a preliminary prospectus with Canadian securities regulators relating to a proposed public offering in Canada of ACSIS through a Canadian income fund. Any prospective sale of ACSIS is subject to the approval of the Company’s Board of Directors, which is dependent upon terms and pricing. Any such sale is also contingent upon a number of conditions including approval by securities regulators, the approval of an amendment of certain terms and conditions of the Company’s senior credit facility and market conditions. There can be no assurance that the Company will consummate any transaction to sell ACSIS. F-31 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 22. PARENT COMPANY FINANCIAL INFORMATION The Company’s senior credit facility contains a number of restrictive covenants and events of default, including covenants limiting the Company’s subsidiaries from making certain loans, advances and payments to ACS Group. Condensed financial information of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. as of December31, 2002 and 2001, and the related condensed consolidated statements of operations and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December31, 2002 is presented and should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and the notes thereto: Balance Sheets 2002 2001 Assets: Investments Other assets Liabilities: Current liabilities Total Assets Long-term debt, net of current portion Total Liabilities Shareholders’ equity: Common stock Treasury stock Paid in capital in excess of par value Accumulated deficit $ $ $ 37,504 $ 222,507 399 37,903 $ 447 222,954 3,793 $ 2,507 15,216 19,009 14,931 17,438 334 (12,082 ) 332 (9,735 ) 277,810 (247,168 ) 276,840 (61,921 ) Total Shareholders’ equity Total Liabilities and shareholders’ equity 18,894 37,903 $ 205,516 222,954 $ Statements of Operations Equity in undistributed loss of subsidiaries 2002 $ (182,656 ) $ 2001 (8,646 ) 2000 $ (25,653 ) Interest expense Interest income Net loss Statements of Cash Flows Net cash flows from operating activities Cash flows from financing activities: Issuance of common stock and warrants Dividends Repurchase of treasury stock Net cash flows provided by financing activities Decrease in cash Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of year (2,591 ) (2,592 ) (2,601 ) — (185,247 ) $ — (11,238 ) $ 3,049 (25,205 ) $ 2002 2001 2000 $ (972 ) $ (1,374 ) $ (95,340 ) 972 2,347 (2,347 ) 972 — — 1,374 — — 1,374 — — 2,352 9,735 (9,735 ) 2,352 (92,988 ) 92,988 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Cash and cash equivalents, end of year $ — $ — $ — F-32 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, Continued Years Ended December31, 2002, 2001 and 2000 (In Thousands Except Per Share Amounts) 23. CONSOLIDATED QUARTERLY OPERATING INFORMATION (UNAUDITED) First Quarter Quarterly Financial Data Second Quarter Third Quarter 2002 Operating revenues Operating income (loss) Income (loss)from continuing operations Loss on discontinued operations Income (loss)before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net income (loss) Income (loss)per share — basic and diluted: Income (loss)from continuing operations Loss on discontinued operations Income (loss)before cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Cumulative effect of change in accounting principle Net income (loss) 2001 Operating revenues Operating income Loss from continuing operations Loss on discontinued operations Net loss Loss per share — basic and diluted: Loss from continuing operations Loss on discontinued operations Net loss 2000 Operating revenues Operating income Loss from continuing operations Loss on discontinued operations Net loss Loss per share — basic and diluted: Loss from continuing operations Loss on discontinued operations Net loss $ 82,010 12,542 (344 ) (6,872 ) $ 92,905 15,173 4,101 (515 ) $ (7,216 ) (105,350 ) (112,566 ) (0.01 ) (0.22 ) (0.23 ) (3.32 ) (3.55 ) 81,301 10,310 (4,559 ) (310 ) (4,869 ) (0.14 ) (0.01 ) (0.15 ) 78,235 11,453 (2,999 ) (139 ) (3,138 ) (0.09 ) — (0.10 ) 3,586 — 3,586 0.13 (0.02 ) 0.11 — 0.11 81,850 12,096 (2,313 ) (491 ) (2,804 ) (0.07 ) (0.02 ) (0.09 ) 80,788 12,084 (2,445 ) (251 ) (2,696 ) (0.07 ) (0.01 ) (0.08 ) $ $ $ $ Fourth Quarter 84,257 (56,388 ) (69,113 ) (109 ) (69,222 ) — (69,222 ) (2.25 ) — (2.25 ) — $ 84,330 5,909 (6,909 ) (136 ) (7,045 ) — (7,045 ) (0.22 ) — (0.22 ) — $ $ (0.22 ) (2.25 ) $ $ 82,981 12,708 (873 ) (526 ) (1,399 ) (0.03 ) (0.02 ) (0.04 ) 75,008 3,524 (10,653 ) (223 ) (10,876 ) (0.32 ) (0.01 ) (0.33 ) 86,083 12,009 (1,775 ) (391 ) (2,166 ) (0.06 ) (0.01 ) (0.07 ) 79,496 6,707 (8,191 ) (304 ) (8,495 ) (0.25 ) (0.01 ) (0.26 ) On March30, 2002, the Company approved a plan to sell its wireless cable television service segment. As a result of this decision, the operating revenue and expense of this segment has been classified as discontinued operations for all periods presented. Effective January1, 2002, the Company adopted SFAS No. 142, Goodwill and Other Intangible Assets and a transitional impairment loss of $105,350 was recognized as the cumulative effect of a change in accounting principle in the consolidated statement of operations. The Company performed its annual goodwill impairment test during the fourth quarter of 2002 and recorded a goodwill impairment loss of $64,755 in operating expenses of the consolidated statement of operations. F-33 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. Table of Contents ALASKA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS GROUP, INC. Schedule II- Valuation and Qualifying Accounts (In Thousands) Description 2002 Allowance for doubtful accounts 2001 Allowance for doubtful accounts 2000 Allowance for doubtful accounts Balance at Beginning of Period $ 4,944 Charged to Charged to costs and expenses $ 4,884 other accounts (1) 214 $ Deductions (2) 3,967 $ Balance at End of Period $ 6,075 $ 9,831 $ 4,932 $ 1,576 $ 11,395 $ 4,944 $ 5,203 $ 7,839 $ 751 $ 3,962 $ 9,831 (1) Represents the reserve for accounts receivable collected on the behalf of others. (2) Represents credit losses written off during the period, less collection of amounts previously written off. F-34 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. . . . EXHIBIT 21.1 SUBSIDIARIES OF THE COMPANY SUBSIDIARY DBA JURISDICTION OF INCORPORATION ---------- --- ----------------------------- Alaska Communications Systems Holdings, Inc. Delaware ACS of the Northland, Inc. ACS, ACS Local Service Alaska ACS of Alaska, Inc. ACS, ACS Local Service Alaska ACS of Fairbanks, Inc. ACS, ACS Local Service Alaska ACS of Anchorage, Inc. ACS, ACS Local Service Delaware ACS Wireless, Inc. ACS Wireless Alaska ACS Long Distance, Inc. ACS, ACS Long Distance Alaska ACS Television, LLC. Utah ACS Internet, Inc. Delaware ACS Messaging, Inc. Alaska ACS InfoSource, Inc. Alaska ACS of Alaska License Sub, Inc. Alaska ACS of the Northland License Sub, Inc. Alaska ACS of Fairbanks License Sub, Inc. Alaska ACS of Anchorage License Sub, Inc. Alaska ACS Wireless License Sub, Inc. Alaska ACS Long Distance License Sub, Inc. Alaska ACS Television License Sub, Inc. Alaska 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. EXHIBIT 23.1 INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' CONSENT We consent to the incorporation by reference in Registration Statement No. 333-92091 of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. on Form S-8 of our report dated February 20, 2003, appearing in the Annual Report on Form 10-K of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. for the year ended December 31, 2002. /s/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP Portland, Oregon March 5, 2003 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. EXHIBIT 99.1 SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350, AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO In connection with the Annual Report of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. (the "Company") on Form 10-K for the period ending December 31, 2002 (the "Report"), I, Charles E. Robinson, Chief Executive Officer of the Company, certify, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. ss. 1350, as adopted pursuant to ss. 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that: (1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and (2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and result of operations of the Company. Date: March 6, 2003 /s/ Charles E. Robinson ------------------------ Charles E. Robinson Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. EXHIBIT 99.2 SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002 CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO 18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350, AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO In connection with the Annual Report of Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. (the "Company") on Form 10-K for the period ending December 31, 2002 (the "Report"), I, Kevin P. Hemenway, Chief Financial Officer of the Company, certify, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. ss. 1350, as adopted pursuant to ss. 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that: (1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and (2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and result of operations of the Company. Date: March 6, 2003 /s/ Kevin P. Hemenway ---------------------- Kevin P. Hemenway Senior Vice President, Chief Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Alaska Communications Systems Group, Inc. 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc. End of Filing 2003. EDGAR Online, Inc.
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