As part of an effort to persuade the FCC to eliminate rate-of-ret...
As part of an effort to persuade the FCC to eliminate rate-of-return (ROR) regulation of rural ILECs (RLECs), Western Wireless gave the Commission a study titled “How Rate of Return Regulation Transformed the USF [Universal Service Fund] for Consumers…
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into Corporate Welfare for the RLECs.” The study by Economics & Technology Inc. (ETI), included in Western Wireless’s reply comments filed Feb. 13 (CC Doc. 96- 45), said more than $1 billion in excess funding goes to rural ILECs and more than $500 million of their corporate operations expenses appeared to represent inefficiencies. Western Wireless -- which petitioned the FCC to open a rulemaking to eliminate ROR regulation of rural ILEC -- said the agency also should eliminate ROR-based access charges as part of intercarrier compensation reform and should recommend to the Federal-State Joint Board on Universal Service a way to replace ROR-based universal service support mechanisms “with a competitively neutral, forward-looking, least-cost technology-based universal service funding mechanism for all carriers.” A group of rural ILECs from Neb. told the FCC, also in reply comments, that some of Western Wireless’s comments “misrepresent the facts.” The Neb. companies said: “Innuendo, and not facts, is the only information that has been supplied to support the charge that the growth of high- cost universal service support [is caused by] ROR regulation.” The Neb. ILECs said the issues raised by the Western Wireless petition are being addressed in other proceedings so it’s “unnecessary and wasteful” to open another rulemaking as proposed by Western Wireless.