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AT&T proposed a plan to ’stabilize’ the Universal Service Fund (U...

AT&T proposed a plan to “stabilize” the Universal Service Fund (USF) by calling a one-year moratorium on new carriers’ applications for USF money, freezing the number of lines for which wireless carriers can get USF support and making about…

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$200 million in targeted reductions to USF programs. AT&T emphasized the plan isn’t “a crude cap” on funding, as proposed by Verizon. “Simply freezing the fund is neither an appropriate nor a sufficient goal,” AT&T said in a March 22 filing with the Federal-State Joint Board on Universal Service. “This interim stabilization step must be seen not only as a means of providing the Joint Board with time to conduct its review of longer-term proposals, but as the first step on the path to such fundamental reform,” the company wrote. AT&T said the plan targets “the source of runaway fund growth [which] has come most significantly from new ETCs [Eligible Telecommunications Carriers] and new ETC lines.” ETC is a regulatory term for carriers eligible to get USF subsidies. Much of AT&T’s plan would hit competitive ETCs, many of whom are wireless carriers. For example, the $200 million in reduced funding would occur through a 25% reduction in the USF funding that’s used to replace access charges. The money would continue to be available to rural ILECs whose access charges were replaced but not to competitive “ETCs that neither have, nor have ever had, an entitlement to access charges and thus do not share incumbents’ historical reliance on such support,” AT&T said.