The FCC should grant Public Knowledge and the National Consumer Law Center’s request to require AT&T to make public the timeline of its IP transition trials, PK Senior Staff Attorney Jodie Griffin and Government Affairs and Outreach Associate Clarissa Ramon told FCC Wireline Bureau and Office of General Counsel officials in a phone call July 30, said an ex parte filing (http://bit.ly/1pUcaUR) posted in docket 12-353 Friday. That AT&T voluntarily disclosed that it will not seek approval to stop offering traditional TDM-based services until at least the second half of 2015 does not address all of the concerns raised by NCLC and PK, the filing said. “AT&T’s disclosure reveals the general timeframe for its proposed trials but does not allow the public to understand or comment on the proposed timing between various steps in AT&T’s trial proposal.” AT&T in its ex parte filing (http://bit.ly/1s68C4K) about a May 27 meeting with a bureau official said it would be “inappropriate to identify a specific date” for starting the approval process to retire TDM service, because of the “competitive sensitivity” of the information.
The Wireline Bureau sought comment on CenturyLink’s petition for a limited waiver from the recordkeeping, retention and reporting requirements in the rural call completion order, said a public notice (http://bit.ly/WX7qqV) released Friday. CenturyLink seeks a limited waiver of the call attempt recording, retention and reporting requirements for calls that use multi-frequency signaling and intraLATA toll calls handed directly from the originating provider to the terminating provider, said the PN. Comments are due in docket 13-39 Aug. 11, replies Aug. 18.
A Michigan county contract awarded to ICSolutions to provide inmate calling services appears to exceed the interim rate caps set by the commission, Securus said in a July 30 letter (http://bit.ly/1oWkR4G) to the FCC Wireline Bureau posted in docket 12-375 Friday. Another competitor, Praeses, is telling correctional facilities to cancel their contracts with Securus unless Securus immediately begins paying commissions to the facilities, the filing said. “Securus is suffering significant harm by maintaining its position” that the FCC inmate calling order prohibits companies from paying facilities commissions, the filing said. ICSolutions and Praeses were not immediately available for comment.
Despite the FCC’s decision to delay implementing the $20.46 rate floor, problems remain, including that rural local exchange carriers (RLECs) in some states are caught in conflicts with state law and procedures, representatives of several rural telcos and the WTA Regulatory Counsel Gerry Duffy told aides to Chairman Tom Wheeler Wednesday, said an ex parte filing (http://bit.ly/1pvGIPl) posted Friday in docket 10-90. A 1995 Colorado statute that has frozen monthly local exchange service rates between $14 and $17.05 “will soon run afoul of the scheduled rate floor increases,” the telcos said. WTA supports the commission’s pending proposal to increase the minimum broadband speed that it seeks to achieve with USF from 4 Mbps to 10 Mbps downstream, the filing said. Sufficient and predictable high-cost support should be available to enable RLEC members to obtain and repay the loans necessary for the required infrastructure upgrades and extensions, the filing said. Involved in the meeting were representatives from Brad 3 Rivers Communications of Fairfield, Montana; Direct Communications of Eagle Mountain, Utah; Idaho Telecom Alliance; MTE Communications of Midvale, Idaho; New Florence Telephone Co. of New Florence, Missouri; and Pine Drive Telephone of Beulah, Colorado, the filing said.
An item to refer USF contribution methodology to the Federal-State Joint Board on Universal Service was put on circulation (http://bit.ly/1rT3IIe) by the FCC Wireline Bureau July 29.
The Illinois Public Telecommunications Association petitioned the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit for a rehearing en banc of the court’s June 13 decision (http://1.usa.gov/1ltd6Bf) (docket 13-1059) in Illinois Public Telecommunications Association v. FCC on Monday. The court upheld an FCC decision not to grant payphone service providers refunds from AT&T and Verizon (CD June 16 p9). The D.C. Circuit said it was not unreasonable or arbitrary for the FCC to permit refunds of charges that exceeded the cost-based rates mandated under Telecom Act Section 276. By permitting individual states to bar refunds, the court split with previous federal circuit courts that agreed the filed rate doctrine did not bar refunds of charges that exceeded the cost-based rate requirement of Section 276, said IPTA attorney Michael Ward. The D.C. Circuit also ignored the time requirements for implementing the Section 276 requirements set in the statute, five FCC orders and previous decisions of the D.C. Circuit, he said. The panel also failed to rule on the Independent Payphone Association of New York argument that the FCC did not require the New York State Public Service Commission to follow its new services test orders delineating the requirements for cost-based rates that the FCC has consistently required in all states, Ward said. The New York association and the Payphone Association of Ohio joined in Monday’s petition.
The FCC should grant Guadalupe Valley Telephone Cooperative’s emergency request for an expedited waiver of Section 51.917(c) of the commission’s rules, NTCA said in comments (http://bit.ly/1mYYFkW) posted Tuesday to docket 10-90. The Texas company relies on USF support and intercarrier compensation revenue, the filing said. The company is requesting it be able to include as company base period revenue of $278,317.62 owed to it by Halo, which has been forced into Chapter 7 bankruptcy, ceased operations and liquidated all of its assets, the filing said. Quoting GVTC’s petition, NTCA said the inability to include the Halo money “would have ‘a significant adverse impact on GVTC’s recovery mechanism funding,’ and would ‘limit[] the company’s ability to invest in and improve its network.'” TDS Telecommunications should be granted a waiver from the March 31, 2012, deadline for defining its eligibility recovery baseline as set forth in footnote 1745 of the USF-for-broadband order, the company’s outside attorney Yaron Dori told FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s legal adviser, Daniel Alvarez, on Monday, said an ex parte notice (http://bit.ly/1mZ9L9E) posted in docket 13-39 Tuesday. Halo’s bankruptcy made it “legally impossible” to obtain a court or regulatory decision order to force Halo to pay amounts ordered to TDS for inclusion in the baseline, the filing said.
Waivers on Safe Harbor record-keeping and reporting requirements under the FCC’s rural call completion order should be granted to CenturyLink, the company said in comments (http://bit.ly/1oG2SPH) posted in docket 13-39 Tuesday. Implementing the Safe Harbor requires complex changes to call routing and switch programming, revisions to intercarrier contracts, updates to routing tables, and necessary quality assurance testing, the company said in seeking waivers for calls that use multi-frequency signaling and intraLATA toll calls handed directly from the originating provider to the terminating provider. “Both of these limited requests for waiver involve historical technology that is not designed for such reporting but still serves customers well,” the filing said.
The FCC should “take concrete steps to bring intermediate providers out of the shadows and into full light,” while the Office of Management and Budget completes its Paperwork Reduction Act review and approves the information collection and record-keeping requirements in the commission’s rural call completion order, representatives from NTCA and the National Exchange Carriers Association told agency staff July 24, said an ex parte notice (http://bit.ly/1uDB1Eq) posted in docket 13-39 Tuesday. The rural representatives met with staff including Daniel Alvarez, wireline aide to Chairman Tom Wheeler, and Terry Cavanaugh, chief of the Enforcement Bureau Investigations and Hearings Division. Calls continue to fail to reach rural areas at an alarming rate, NTCA and NECA told the FCC. As proposed in the Further NPRM, the FCC should require every provider in control of call routing to register with the agency “and certify that it does not engage in the blocking or restricting of calls to rural areas or that it strips or modifies call detail information,” the groups said in the notice. The providers would also certify that they have in place processes to monitor performance and that they route calls only to other certified intermediate providers or directly to terminating local exchange carriers, the groups said. The commission should also “create a carrier contact list so that other carriers experiencing call completion problems know whom to contact at the originating carrier for resolution,” the notice said.
The FCC’s International, Wireless and Wireline bureaus jointly Friday approved Frontier Communications’ bid to buy AT&T’s wireline, broadband and video assets in Connecticut (http://bit.ly/1t5sYPb). Frontier said it has also received approval from the Department of Justice and is awaiting approval from the Connecticut Public Utilities Regulatory Authority. Pending that approval, Frontier said,it will close the deal in Q4. Frontier will pay $2 billion for AT&T’s wireline business, its statewide fiber network, its U-verse video business in the state and some satellite-TV customers. The deal was originally announced in December (CD Dec 18 p9). Frontier has said it plans to expand 10 Mbps broadband service to an additional 100,000 homes AT&T’s network currently doesn’t serve at that speed and has “committed to improving wireline service in the state,” the FCC said. Frontier has addressed concerns from the Communications Workers of America, committing to guaranteeing all existing jobs connected with the AT&T services included in the deal and pledging it will add 85 CWA-represented jobs in the state, the FCC said.