CompTel President Matt Salmon resigned, the competitive local exchange carrier association said Wednesday. CEO Jerry James will take on Salmon’s regulatory duties, as he did for six months after replacing former CEO and President Earl Comstock in mid-2007. Salmon, a former congressman, will join the lobby firm Policy Impact, of which T-Mobile and Skype are clients. Salmon spent slightly more than a year as CompTel president. There was no indication of the move at the group’s conference last week in Dallas, where Salmon participated in a panel. The decision wasn’t final until Wednesday morning, a CLEC official said. CompTel’s board doesn’t yet have a successor lined up for the position, and it’s unclear whether the association will continue the two- leader approach, which was new at the time of Salmon’s appointment, the official said.
Adam Bender
Adam Bender, Deputy Managing Editor for Privacy Daily. Bender leads a team of journalists and reports on state privacy legislation, rulemaking and litigation. In previous roles at Communications Daily, he covered telecom and internet policy in the states, Congress and at the FCC. He has won awards for his reporting from the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ), Specialized Information Publishers Association (SIPA) and the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing (SABEW). Bender studied print journalism at American University and is the author of multiple dystopian sci-fi novels. Keep up to date with Bender by reading his blog and following him on social media including Bluesky, Mastodon and LinkedIn.
Senior AT&T executives suggested a light regulatory touch to promote U.S. broadband investment. They asked the agencies responsible for broadband stimulus to keep to a minimum the conditions on grants and loans. The telecom industry owes much of its success to the deregulatory stance of policymakers, said CEO Randall Stephenson in a speech Wednesday to the Economic Club of Washington. Afterward, Senior Vice President Jim Cicconi told reporters that the company’s participation in the government’s broadband stimulus efforts may hinge on the number of strings attached to the $7.2 billion that’s available.
Don’t reconsider a FeatureGroup IP forbearance petition on VoIP access charges, major incumbent wireline carriers urged the FCC. FeatureGroup, a competitive local exchange carrier serving VoIP providers, is challenging a January order denying the company forbearance relief (CD Feb 24 p9). The company wants a ruling that access charges don’t apply to Internet-based traffic that interconnects with carriers on the public switched telephone network. In opposition filings last week, AT&T, Verizon, Embarq and four rural carrier associations said the FCC was right to deny relief.
DALLAS -- Competitive phone companies must retool lobbying efforts for a changed Washington, industry executives said Thursday on a panel at the CompTel show. Competitors should find creative new ways to pitch their interests and should lobby all parts of government, panelists said. “As the players change, our message has to change, too,” said Matt Salmon, CompTel’s president.
DALLAS -- Competitive phone companies are eager for a new FCC after suffering eight years of policy favoring incumbent carriers, TW Telecom CEO Larissa Herda said in a keynote late Tuesday at the CompTel show. Competitors survived “one of the most unfriendly regulatory environments possible,” Herda said.
DALLAS -- Competitive phone companies believe procedural reform is needed at the FCC, representatives of competitive local exchange carriers said Tuesday on a CompTel panel on agency hot topics. Competitors should submit their ideas to the commission, perhaps together under the CompTel banner, said attorney Genevieve Morelli. Officials made predictions on other issues important to competitive local exchange carriers, including how the FCC will deal with two Verizon forbearance petitions and the longstanding fight over universal service and overhauling intercarrier compensation.
The Obama administration defended the law granting immunity to telecom carriers that took part in the government’s warrantless wiretapping. U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker in San Francisco this month suggested that the FISA Amendments Act, enacted last year, may be unconstitutional because it seemed to give “literally no guidance for the exercise of discretion” by the attorney general (CD Feb 13 p8). But “nothing in the Constitution prevents Congress from granting to the Attorney General broad discretion regarding whether and when to use his authority” under the surveillance law, the Justice Department told the court last week. Further, the Act doesn’t delegate “anything resembling legislative power” to the attorney general, DoJ said. Rather, the official’s role “is limited to gathering and presenting” facts in court, it said. Even if Congress did give the attorney general decision-making authority, it provided the “specific and narrow” guidelines required, the department said. DoJ’s brief marked the Obama administration entry into the court case. It’s “disappointing” that DoJ’s position hasn’t changed under the new president, Cindy Cohn, the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s legal director, said in an interview. EFF is representing customers of AT&T and other carriers in the case. The filing looked “no different” from what EFF would have expected from the Bush administration, she said. As a senator, President Barack Obama voted for the FISA legislation, despite having publicly opposed telco immunity. In a statement Thursday, a Justice Department spokesman said the immunity bill “is the law of the land, and as such the Department of Justice defends it in court.” But DoJ’s hands weren’t tied, Cohn said. On the bright side, she said, the somewhat unenthusiastic statement leaves open the possibility that the Obama administration may reconsider the official executive branch view. It’s unclear when the judge will issue a ruling, Cohn said. Judge Walker probably won’t schedule another oral argument, but he could ask for more briefs from parties, she said.
AT&T didn’t violate antitrust laws when it set DSL prices high at wholesale and low at retail, the Supreme Court ruled Wednesday. The court reversed an appeals-court decision allowing a “price squeeze” claim against the carrier. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the unanimous decision in Pacific Bell v. LinkLine. Justices John Stevens, David Souter and Ruth Ginsburg signed on to a concurrence by Stephen Breyer that differed narrowly with Roberts’ opinion.
More than 600 telecom carriers each face $20,000 fines for failing to file annual certifications last year showing compliance with Customer Proprietary Network Information rules, the FCC said late Tuesday. Other operators, accused of filing faulty certifications, face fines of $1,000 to $10,000. Most of the carriers that received notices of apparent liability were small companies from across the wireline, wireless and satellite industries. The fines are a part of the FCC’s efforts to “reduce its backlog” and provide “improved regulatory guidance,” the commission said.
The FCC took flak on Friday from federal court judges about two orders granting incumbent phone companies forbearance from dominant carrier requirements applying to the special access market. The exchange took place during oral argument at the U.S. Appeals Court for the District of Columbia Circuit. The case concerns FCC decisions in 2007 to grant petitions by AT&T, Embarq and Frontier, which were submitted as “me too” requests following a deemed-granted ruling for Verizon. In oral argument, Judges David Sentelle, Brett Kavanaugh and Harry Edwards had far more questions for the FCC than for petitioners representing business end users and competitive carriers.