AT&T is investing as much as it can in its broadband infrastructure, CEO Randall Stephenson said Thursday at the Sanford Bernstein Conference. Some expect AT&T to apply for broadband stimulus money, but Stephenson said the company is waiting to see how it will be distributed. Under the new administration, issues like net neutrality, intercarrier compensation and USF reform aren’t going away, he said. Meanwhile, AT&T, particularly its enterprise business, is still feeling the economic pressure, he said.
USTelecom joined Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel in asking the FCC to reject a Corr Wireless petition that seeks to have universal service monies that used to flow to Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel redirected into a pool shared by all competitive eligible telecommunications carriers. The wireline association called Corr arguments “nonsensical.”
An FCC report on rural broadband prescribes government intervention to spur availability and demand. The report, released publicly on Wednesday, was required by Congress in the 2008 Farm Bill and did not require sign off by all commissioners. Instead, writing in the first-person, acting Chairman Michael Copps highlighted common problems affecting rural broadband, including technological challenges, lack of data and high network costs. Copps also urged a revamp of the Universal Service Fund, new rules on network openness and an audit of all spectrum that the FCC has licensed, with an eye on where it is being used effectively or could see more use on a secondary basis.
District of Columbia residents with impaired hearing are signing up for expanded relay service, the Public Service Commission said May 19. So far, 23 Washingtonians have bought Captioned Telephone Relay Service phones that let users listen to a caller while reading word-for-word captions of what’s being said on the phone’s built-in display, the commission said. Hamilton Relay, which runs the city’s relay service, began providing CapTel in November. Customers access it through their local phone service at no additional monthly charge. The service is funded by the city’s Universal Service Trust Fund, underwritten by fees charged local phone customers, and the federal Universal Service Fund. For at least a year, Hamilton plans to offer the $495 CapTel phones to District residents for $99, the commission said.
Wyoming’s Public Service Commission set the state’s Universal Service Fund assessment level for 2009-2010 at 1 percent of gross intrastate retail telecom revenue, it said Friday. The rate applies to all customer billings beginning July 1. The commission set the weighted statewide average local exchange service rate at $25.05 for the 12-months starting July 1. For that period, the associated support benchmark is $32.57. No Wyoming customer should pay more than $32.57 monthly for basic phone service, excluding taxes, fees, surcharges and charges for custom features and other options, the commission said. The 12 telcos eligible for Wyoming USF support have been sent confidential spreadsheets stating the support they're eligible for. The commission proposes to distribute support totaling aggregate $225,769 monthly, it said.
The 8th U.S. Appeals Court should rehear en banc Nebraska’s appeal of a lower court decision barring the state from making traditional VoIP providers pay into its universal service fund, Nebraska officials said Thursday. A panel of the St. Louis-based court found May 1 that a U.S. District Court in Nebraska properly upheld an injunction Vonage obtained prohibiting Nebraska’s utility commission from assessing the VoIP company (CD May 4, p5). The en banc request challenges what the state called the panel’s “overbroad reading” of the FCC Vonage preemption order that the appeals court cited in rebuffing Nebraska. Contrary to what the 8th Circuit said, Vonage would not have succeeded with a claim to preemption that it deployed to obtain the injunction, the state argued. “Further, the Decision is based on a misapplication of the impossibility exception employed by the FCC to preempt such entry regulations,” Nebraska officials said in petitioning to have the ruling vacated and an en banc rehearing set. “Indeed, the United States and FCC submitted an amicus brief in this case in support of the NPSC, asserting that the Vonage Preemption Order ‘did not address, let alone preempt, the state-level universal service obligations of interconnected VoIP providers…’, and that the impossibility exception did not preclude the NPSC from placing this requirement on Vonage, as the NPSC’s NUSF Order ‘does not present a conflict with the FCC’s rules or policies.” The Nebraska utility commission’s order that Vonage pay into the state fund “does not conflict with any federal regulatory policy or impair the FCC’s authority to regulate the interstate aspect of interconnected VoIP service,” the state said. “In fact, its action is entirely consistent with the FCC’s imposition of USF contribution requirements on Vonage and other interconnected VoIP providers. The ‘impossibility exception’ relied on in the Decision thus does not apply.” In seeking an en banc rehearing, the state faces “an upstream swim,” said Brad Ramsay, general counsel for the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners. “What’s in Nebraska’s favor is that there’s no question but that the court got it wrong. From a policy, legal and commonsense perspective, the May 1 ruling makes no sense. The question is, will the other judges be willing to act or will they defer to their brother jurists? If the judges really look at this case, they should reverse and rehear.” The May 1 ruling stands to imperil state universal service funds and the federal USF, Ramsay said. “Everything is migrating to VoIP -- not necessarily nomadic, but VoIP nonetheless,” he said. “There are 23 states with universal service funds. If those funds aren’t there, the rates in those states will go up significantly, and there will be a greater burden on the federal fund. This is really bad.” NARUC, which filed an amicus brief on Nebraska’s behalf in the earlier appeal, may weigh in on the en banc request as well, Ramsay said.
TracFone Wireless is asking the FCC to change its Universal Service Fund rules to maximize the benefit it could provide to Lifeline customers. The carrier said in a filing last week that its petition seeking a rulemaking would base reimbursement on a single subscriber line charge rate nationwide, regardless of what’s charged by the local incumbent, faced no real opposition. It said the FCC should ask for additional comment.
An FCC notice of inquiry about universal service high- cost support for non-rural carriers spurred old arguments for a USF overhaul, in comments at the commission last week. But the notice, which asks how the FCC should respond to a 2005 remand by the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals (CD April 9 p4), may address too narrow an issue to result in comprehensive reform, industry officials said. In 2005, the court called unlawful the FCC’s current non-rural rules, which address carriers like Qwest that serve high-cost areas with too many lines to be considered “rural” by the statutory definition.
NTIA is seeking 70 full-time jobs in its FY 2010 budget request, up from an estimated 30 in FY 2009, to carry out the broadband stimulus program, according to documents released Thursday by the Obama administration. The budget request says the agency will make awards under its $4.7 billion stimulus program “as expeditiously as practicable, with initial awards planned for 2009 and all awards being made not later than the end of 2010,” said the Office of Management and Budget.
Acting on a suggestion by Qwest, Wyoming’s Public Service Commission plans to amend rules on state universal-service funds, the commission said Tuesday. The rewrite of section 500, in chapter 5 of the commission’s procedural rules and special regulations, would create a way for eligible telecommunications carriers to seek state permission to divert federal Universal Service Fund support to specific building projects or equipment upgrades, the commission said. The same change would permit the state to subsidize authorized projects or upgrades by increasing the state USF assessment. Any diversions would need commission approval. Qwest said the change will encourage efforts to improve service, including its own proposed spending to assess service quality in the Lander-Riverton Wind River Indian Reservation area, the commission said. The proposed change would address a situation apparently particular to Wyoming, said Qwest President for Wyoming Mike Ceballos. In other states federal USF funds cover high-cost construction, but Wyoming requires ETCs like Qwest to use such funds as credits on customer bills, he said. Qwest has as many rural customers as independent phone companies in the state do, but independents can use federal USF funds to cover their costs, he noted. “I believe we are unique in Wyoming in applying federal USF money to bill credits,” Ceballos said. “The rule change would allow the Commission to hear proposals to allocate some of that federal money to construction and upgrades.” At the reservation, on which Qwest is the predominant carrier, the company plans to study how best to invest in high-cost areas. Only Alaska is less dense in population than Wyoming, Ceballos noted. His state averages four customers per square mile compared with Alaska’s 3.7, and some Wyoming locales, like the town of Lusk, have one customer per square mile, he said. The commission plans a public hearing on the proposed amendments (Docket Number 90000-102-XO-08) at 9 a.m. May 27 at its headquarters, 2515 Warren Ave., Suite 300, Cheyenne, Wyo. May 18 is the deadline for written comments -- http://psc.state.wy.us under “Hot Topics.”