In our view, under current State-action principles applied by the United States Supreme Court (see, Blum v Yaretsky, 457 US 991; Rendell-Baker v Kohn, 457 US 830; Flagg Bros, v Brooks, 436 US 149; Jackson v Metropolitan Edison Co., 419 US 345), petitioner has failed to plead any violation of his 1st Amendment rights on the part of respondent Public Service Commission (PSC). State-action analysis begins with "careful attention to the gravamen of the plaintiffs complaint” (Blum v Yaretsky, supra, p 1003). The gravamen of the complaint in the instant case is found in *607paragraphs 7, 8 and 9 of the petition. The constitutional deprivation complained of is that petitioner is being "compelled to support * * * charities * * * by means of including coerced contributions in his utility bills” (para 7); that the PSC "permits the New York Telephone Company and all New York utilities which it regulates to dispose of their charitable contributions extracted from their customers in any manner each utility determines without any protection for the interests of the customers” (para 8; emphasis supplied); and petitioner "has no alternative means of obtaining the basic utility services the New York Telephone Company provides him in his home geographic area” (para 9).
Nowhere in the foregoing key allegations, nor elsewhere in the petition, are facts pleaded which attribute the claimed constitutional deprivation to the PSC other than indirectly through its purely regulatory authority over respondent New York Telephone Company (NYT). Any invasion of petitioner’s 1st Amendment rights directly results from the acts of NYT, a private corporation. It is NYT, and not the PSC, that adds the proportionate share of the cost of its charitable donations to petitioner’s telephone bill and threatens petitioner with discontinuance of service if the bill is not paid in full. This being the case, to establish the requisite State action on the basis of NYT’s acts, there must be found "a sufficiently close nexus between the State and the challenged action of the regulated entity so that the action of the latter may be fairly treated as that of the State itself’ (Jackson v Metropolitan Edison Co., supra, p 351). Detailed inquiry may be required as to the true nature of the State’s involvement (supra).
The Supreme Court has rather precisely enunciated the test for State action when the constitutional challenge is made to the decisions or the acts of a private entity. A State normally can be held responsible "only when it has exercised coercive power or has provided such significant encouragement, either overt or covert”, that the act or decision is deemed that of the State itself; "[m]ere approval of or acquiescence in the initiatives of a private party is not sufficient” (Blum v Yaretsky, supra, p 1004; emphasis supplied). The only other identified instance of imputing to a State the results of private initiative is when the private entity exercises powers that are " 'traditionally the exclusive prerogative of the State’ ” (supra, at p 1005, quoting Jackson v Metropolitan Edison Co., supra, p 353).
The petition and other papers submitted at Special Term *608simply did not meet the foregoing requirements for attributing NYT’s acts to the PSC. The record is devoid of anything but conclusory allegations of the PSC’s overt or covert encouragement to NYT’s charges of which petitioner complains. The PSC’s policy, announced in a 1970 ruling permitting utilities to include charitable contributions as a legitimate operating expense, is entirely neutral on the issue. It merely recognizes the modern reality of corporate life that it is good business for corporate citizens (utilities included) to support charitable causes in the communities where they exist and operate. The 1970 ruling expressly disclaimed any screening function in approving charitable contributions as a utility-operating expense except as to whether such contributions are truly eleemosynary. Petitioner has not set forth any factual basis suggesting that the PSC has deviated from that position in the 15 years that the policy has been in effect. Demonstrative of the absence of any overt or covert encouragement is the fact that the PSC has limited its approval to pre-1970 utility contribution levels, adjusted for inflation. Such unaligned approval of or acquiescence in the utility practice of making charitable donations and then passing them on to customers is insufficient to hold the State responsible (Blum v Yaretsky, 457 US 991, 1004-1005, supra). The fact that approval of the challenged act of NYT by the PSC initially took the form of a general policy statement in 1970 does not support any inference of State encouragement. Even express statutory authorization of a private act does not convert such conduct into State action (Flagg Bros, v Brooks, 436 US 149, 165, supra). *
Nor has petitioner pleaded any facts or otherwise shown that the PSC has itself exercised any coercive power to exact a share of NYT’s philanthropies from him. As previously discussed, the PSC does not mandate the making of contributions and does not require any utility to file a proposed rate tariff which includes such contributions as a recoverable operating expense. No rule, regulation or practice has been cited by petitioner to support any inference that the PSC would require termination of telephone service were a subscriber to deduct from his utility bill the portion thereof attributable to such contributions.
Similarly unavailing is petitioner’s reliance on NYT’s mo*609nopoly position in providing telephone service, a function heavily affecting the interest of the public. This ground for attributing the conduct of a public utility to a State was expressly rejected in Jackson v Metropolitan Edison Co. (419 US 345, 351-352, supra), which also held that the furnishing of utility service is not a function traditionally the exclusive prerogative of a State (supra, at p 353).
In short, the instant case falls squarely under Blum and Jackson (supra). In essence, they hold that the requisite nexus between the challenged act or decision of a private entity and a State is not established merely because (1) the entity is heavily regulated, (2) its market position is enhanced by State regulation, and (3) a State regulatory agency has authority to prevent the conduct complained of. Nothing more has been shown here.
Contrary to petitioner’s contention, Abood v Detroit Bd. of Educ. (431 US 209) does not support the opposite conclusion. In Abood, the Supreme Court struck a Michigan labor statute sanctioning an "agency shop” contract requiring nonunion member employees to pay a service fee equivalent to union dues as a condition of employment, insofar as such fees may be applied to fund political activities of the union. Abood is quite distinguishable. First, Abood notes that such an agency or union shop contract is an integral element of an express legislative policy to foster exclusive representation of employees in the collective bargaining process (supra, at pp 220-222). Here, as has already been discussed, the PSC’s policy is neutral as to the challenged action of NYT. Secondly, as the State-action discussion in Abood explains (supra, at p 218, n 12), it is only by virtue of legislative approval that such agency shop arrangements are enforceable. In the instant case, the PSC’s power to prevent the charging of customers for the utilities’ donations is totally derived from the PSC’s general, rate-setting authority. Without that regulatory control, NYT, like any other private corporation, would be free to pass on its charitable expenses as a cost of doing business. Finally, once the agency shop contract in Abood was entered into, Michigan law mandated the employer to discharge any nonunion employee who refused to pay the service fee, and a third party (the union) was given the right to enlist the coercive power of the State to enforce that obligation on the part of the employer. No such coercive power, either to mandate NYT’s imposition of the challenged charges or to *610terminate petitioner’s telephone service for nonpayment thereof, has been pleaded here.
For all the foregoing reasons, Special Term’s order should be reversed and the petition dismissed.
Main, J. P., and Yesawich, Jr., J., concur with Harvey, J.; Mikoll and Levine, JJ., dissent and vote to reverse in an opinion by Levine, J.
Order affirmed, with costs.
To the extent that Public Utilities Commn. v Poliak (343 US 451) may have held to the contrary, its precedential value has been virtually eliminated by Jackson v Metropolitan Edison Co. (419 US 345, 356).