Representatives of WTA, Lict and Totah Communications met with Wireline Bureau staff on the enhanced-alternative connect America cost model, seeking an update. The representatives “raised concerns about some ambiguities in how this adjustment process would be applied, and the potential for significant adverse consequences,” said a filing last week in docket 10-90. Bureau staff “indicated that they are on track to complete the adjustment determinations by the end of the year, and that they intended to issue a preliminary data set of the changed locations and support adjustments for the rural broadband providers to review (and seek to correct) before the process is finalized.”
NCTA representatives downplayed USTelecom's objections to new rules on pole attachments in a meeting with FCC Wireline Bureau staff (see 2504220015). USTelecom's claims are “either factually inaccurate and/or incorrect,” cablers said. Representatives of NCTA, Comcast, Charter Communications and Cox Enterprises attended the meeting.
Talton made its case at the FCC for why its petition seeking a waiver of the agency's rules capping the rates for audio and video for incarcerated people should get confidential treatment. Talton serves U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and “compelling disclosure of sensitive material on such a flimsy basis as seen here risks chilling petitioners from confidently disclosing their protected information to the FCC,” the company said in a filing posted Friday (docket 23-62).
Reply comments are now due May 19 on proposed changes to submarine cable rules (docket 24-523), the FCC Office of International Affairs ordered Friday. The seven-day extension will allow parties more time to gather information needed for replies, it said. The subsea cable NPRM was adopted unanimously by the FCC commissioners in November (see 2411210006).
The Irregulators raised questions about the retirement of copper lines by major providers in a filing posted Friday in docket 80-286. The group pointed to a regulatory accounting filing that Verizon made in New York, suggesting that the costs of copper networks are often overstated. LTC Consulting and X-labs are among those supporting the Irregulators' work (see 2505070017).
Utility companies Dominion Energy and Xcel Energy this week slammed comments in an NCTA letter last month on pole attachments. “NCTA demands a thirty day timeline for approval of all attacher-proposed third-party contractors, coupled with a ‘deemed approved’ remedy applicable in any case where the requested timeline is not met,” said a filing in docket 17-84. “NCTA’s proposal is contrary to critical factual determinations made by the Commission in its 2018 Pole Attachment Order, unnecessary, and completely at odds with the safety practices, processes, and policies of electric utility companies.”
The National Consumer Law Center and others representing the interests of prisoners and their families filed in support of the FCC’s July order implementing the Martha Wright-Reed Act of 2022 in an amicus brief filed Thursday at the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (24-8028).
The FCC Wireline Bureau suspended “indefinitely” deadlines to file public comments and reply comments on a Talton petition seeking a waiver of the commission’s rules capping the rates for audio and video for incarcerated people provided to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The suspension came after the United Church of Christ (UCC) Media Justice Ministry protested Talton’s failure to provide data that the ministry needs to comment on the petition (see 2505020024).
The FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau this week released the telecom relay service (TRS) funding and payment formulas for the program year beginning July 1. The report is based on numbers calculated by TRS administrator Rolka Loube Associates. The rates listed for the next program year are $6.1229 per minute for traditional TRS (TTY), $7.2539 for speech-to-speech service, and $2.7867 for captioned telephone service. All the rates have increased sharply since the 2020-21 program year, led by TTY, which is up 63.2%, the report said.
USTelecom urged the FCC to reject an April filing that sought an “immediate halt” of four Wireline Bureau orders released in March whose goal was to quicken copper retirements (see 2503200056). Filing as the Irregulators, LTC Consulting and X-labs said the bureau shouldn’t be allowed to issue the order on delegated authority without commission debate or public comment.