intercarrier compensation, high-cost USF and the contributions methodology.
AT&T urged the FCC “to create a rational, sustainable business model for Universal Service Fund support for broadband, the company said in an ex parte filing. Executives met with Chairman Julius Genachowski’s wireline adviser, Zac Katz, and renewed calls for comprehensive USF and intercarrier compensation reform. Windstream sat down separately with Angela Kronenberg, wireline adviser to Commissioner Mignon Clyburn; Brad Gillen, wireline adviser to Commissioner Meredith Baker; and Margaret McCarthy, wireline adviser to Commissioner Michael Copps, to discuss USF reform. The agency ought to find a way to let companies recoup lost revenue after mandated rate reductions, Windstream said. It backed a five-year transition period to reduce rates and recommended an order assessing USF fees on VoIP providers.
Repurposing the Mobile Satellite Services (MSS) bands should be a top priority of the FCC to promote the rollout of 4G services, FCC Commissioner Meredith Baker said Tuesday at the Law Seminars International Conference on Spectrum and Broadband. Baker listed three other “action items” the FCC should move on quickly to promote 4G service in the U.S. She also predicted that work on overhauling the Universal Service Fund will start in December and dominate the commission’s agenda next year.
The FCC should be “vigilant” in its oversight of middle-mile prices and access, seek public comment on whether its rules on retirement of copper-wire networks let ILECs keep small carriers out of the market, consider a rulemaking on access to and device interoperability on the newly auctioned 700 MHz spectrum and “examine the impact” on CLECs before increasing rates on pole attachments, the Small Business Administration’s advocacy office said. The comments came in response to last month’s public notice from the Wireline Bureau, which asked for input on how broadband affects small and medium-sized businesses. SBA said its comments reflect the views of leaders from small broadband companies who participated in an Oct. 5 agency roundtable.
Verizon, Verizon Wireless and 11 rural LECs have urged the FCC to reject Corr Wireless’s appeal to redistribute high-cost universal service funds to competitive eligible telecommunications carriers (CETCs). Last month, the commission agreed with Corr that the Universal Service Administrative Co. couldn’t alter the interim high-cost USF cap after Sprint and Verizon agreed to forgo their support funds (CD Sept 7 p1). But the commission ruled against Corr’s request that the money surrendered be doled out to CETCs. Corr and Allied Wireless Communications have asked the FCC to reconsider. In comments filed late Thursday, Verizon and Verizon Wireless said nothing in the interim cap order that forced them to walk away from high-cost support contributions required redistribution. The 11 RLECs -- 3 Rivers Telephone Cooperative, BEK Communications Cooperative, Choctaw Telephone, Delhi Telephone, Dickey Rural Telephone Cooperative, Harrisonville Telephone, Penasco Valley Telephone Cooperative, Smart City Telecom, SRT Communications, Waitsfield-Fayston Telephone and Wiggins Telephone Association -- said Verizon and Sprint represent some $530 million of the high-cost fund and giving CETCs a slice would be “an end run” around cap rules.
The FCC approved 5-0 a rulemaking notice on a mobility fund to become part of the Universal Service Fund. The NPRM also seeks comments on reverse auctions to select carriers to build out 3G networks in unserved areas at a competitive cost. The program would not expand the size of the USF, and it would be paid for from funds that Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel voluntarily surrendered as merger commitments. The fund will be small, FCC officials acknowledged, offering as little as $100 million -- about 1/40th the amount already handed out by the federal government through Recovery Act programs.
The VON Coalition tried to hold off an impending order giving states the right to assess Universal Service Fund levies on nomadic VoIP providers, said an ex parte notice filed by the group late Tuesday. Executive Director Glenn Richards said he met with Commissioner Meredith Baker’s new wireline adviser, Brad Gillen, and Chairman Julius Genachowski’s wireline adviser Zac Katz and argued that the FCC’s 2004 Vonage preemption order ought to keep states from levying their own USF fees on nomadic carriers. Last month, at eighth-floor urging, Kansas and Nebraska amended their request for a declaratory ruling on nomadic VoIP by deleting requests to make any USF assessments retroactive. This clears the way for a declaratory order, which FCC and industry officials had expected to already have been issued. State officials indicated they may still seek retroactive payments (CD Sept 21 p6). This has the VON Coalition worried. “The commission must make clear that it is changing (and not simply clarifying) the law, or there … may be unnecessary litigation,” Richards said.
The FCC gave interested parties until Thursday to comment on two separate appeals, each of which challenge the commission’s decision in the Corr Wireless Order (CD Sept 7 p1). Both SouthernLINC and Allied Wireless Communications asked the commission to review the Corr decision. Oppositions to SouthernLINC’s petition were due Tuesday but oppositions on Allied’s petition aren’t due until Friday. The commission changed the comment deadline for both petitions to Thursday.
Capitol Hill aides urged patience from those seeking a Telecom Act revamp by Congress. A rewrite will happen, but Congress doesn’t want to rush it, said Danny Sepulveda, senior adviser to Senate Communications Subcommittee Chairman John Kerry, D-Mass. Other priorities next year include wireless spectrum and oversight of the broadband stimulus program, aides told a panel discussion Tuesday by the Free State Foundation.
The FCC has made “a lot of progress” but still has “a lot of work to do” implementing the National Broadband Plan, Chairman Julius Genachowski told One Economy’s 10th anniversary gala Thursday night. One Economy gave Genachowski its Metcalfe Digital Opportunity Award, but Genachowski invited the commission’s broadband team up to the stage to accept the honor. FCC priorities include revamping the Universal Service Fund, setting up incentive auctions and recovering underused spectrum, “empowering” broadband consumers and promoting competition, and increasing broadband adoption, Genachowski said. “Broadband benefits our society more every day, while the cost of digital exclusion for those left behind skyrocket.” Government should focus on modernizing USF to support broadband, One Economy Chairman Rey Ramsey told reporters. “That money is going to help more than replace what NTIA” had been providing under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, he said. It’s “doubtful” the next Congress will fund another broadband grant program, he said. Comcast Executive Vice President David Cohen told the event the cable company plans to add 50 Digital Connector sites by year-end. The program, created with One Economy, teaches digital literacy to teens and young adults. Comcast expects the new sites to impart Internet skills to 1,500 young adults by December 2011, Cohen said.